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Preface to "UFOs, An Air Force Dilemma" 
by Hector Quintanilla. USAF (retired) 



National Institute for Discovery Science 

For the first time NIDS is electronically publishing a book manuscript written in 1975 by Lt. Col. 
Hector Quintanilla, the head of the USAF Project Blue Book. Project Blue Book was supposed to be an 
objective investigation and documentation of the UFO phenomenon carried out by the United States Air 
Force from March 1952 until December 1969. Project Blue Book was the successor to Projects Sign and 
Grudge. 

The book is a summary in Quintanilla' s own words of his involvement, as head of project Blue 
Book, in the investigation of the UFO phenomenon. "UFOs, an Air Force Dilemma" was also given the 
title "UFOs: A $20,000,000 Fiasco" by Quintanilla in a book proposal to unnamed publishers. 

NIDS's purpose in making available this previously unpublished manuscript is twofold: (a) to 
demonstrate to the interested public, through the authors own unedited words, Lt. Col. Quintanilla' s 
attitudes, preconceptions, and biases that dominated Project Blue Book, and (b) to make available to 
historians and to the public the methodology and practices employed by the United States Air Force in 
investigating and cataloging the UFO phenomenon. 

NIDS had the choice of introducing editorial changes into the manuscript. We refrained in order 
to preserve the historical accuracy of this document. The manuscript covers the years of Quintanilla' s 
own involvement from July 1963 to Decemberl969 in Project Blue Book and also contains many 
valuable insights into the public and media reaction to the USAF funded study, from the perspective of 
the author. In particular, Lt. Col. Quintanilla' s antagonistic descriptions of University of Arizona 
professor James A McDonald's pursuit of the UFO phenomena as well as Dr. J. Allen Hynek's 
relationship with project Blue Book are annotated for the public record in considerable detail. 

NIDS does NOT endorse or support Lt. Colonel Quintanilla' a opinions, biases, or judgments 
regarding any organizations or individuals mentioned in the manuscript, nor about the UFO phenomenon 
in general. Rather, our intent is to enter Lt. Col. Quintanilla' s thoughts, attitudes, and actions in his own 
words into the public record. In this way, the public will be free to judge for themselves the efficacy and 
serious lack thereof by Lt. Col Quintanilla of the taxpayer-funded investigations of the UFO phenomenon 
that were carried out by the United States Air Force during the period of 1963-1969. The public will be 
free to judge from Quintanilla' s own words whether the USAF investigation led by Quitanilla could 
objectively accomplish the mission it was asked to perform on behalf of American taxpayers. 

Disclaimer 

NIDS does NOT endorse the views espoused by Hector Quintanilla in this manuscript entitled "UFOs, an 
Air Force Dilemma" regarding the UFO phenomenon or regarding any individuals or organizations 
mentioned herein. The views are those of the author himself and are being presented by NIDS solely as a 
historical service to the public. NIDS assumes no liability or responsibility for any of the statements made 
in this manuscript. 



"Tell The Truth and They Will Not Believe You" 
Hector Quintanilla, in a private video interview, December 1990 

By Alex Chionetti 

Just when I thought I was safe from "flying saucers" and field research investigations undertaken all 
over the Americas for over a decade, then as my life as an ufologist seemed over, a friend introduced me 
to Karl S. Quintanilla. 

When that last name rang my ear, I asked trembling: Your father had something to do with the Air 
Force, more specifically with Project Blue Book? My friend responded yes. 

I was hesitant to break my long sabbatical of having nothing more to do with the UFO phenomena. 
Didn't take time to meet the son of Lt. Col. Hector Quintanilla, and in a few hours the manuscript you 
have before your eyes, fell into my hands. A real treasure for a young ufologist, more so for a researcher 
of Hispanic origin. 

Prior to this, one of my mentors had been the late Dr. J. Allen Hynek, with whom I collaborated in 
the founding of the Buenos Aires-based CUFOS branch, associated to the CIU (Comision de 
Investigaciones Ufologicas), in the early eighties. Life was connecting me with his nemesis during the 
golden days of ufology and Project Blue Book. Dr. Hynek was a civilian consultant under the payroll of 
the Air Force. After many years of skepticism, he turned into the respected icon of scientific UFO 
research. 

The confrontations between Hynek and Quintanilla were similar to the modem dialogues between 
Mulder and Scully of "The X Files," as you will see in this manuscript. 

That was during my first months in California, where the impact of the Mexican-American culture, 
the Chicano universe, was a fascinating mystery. And Hector Quintanilla was an outstanding 
representative of that culture. 

He crossed the Rio Grande with his mother, his family were immigrants, part of the border flux, 
wetbacks. He arrived during one of the worst periods in the history of the Unites States, he Big 
Depression of 1929. But his determination and military vocation turned him into a proud soldier and 
physicist. 

I remember having long conversations with him, in our native language Spanish. I remember asking 
him about Roswell, which was barely mentioned during his time. "Hangar 18," he remarked, "I went but 
there was nothing else than an empty structure, nothing special, no little guys, no ships." We talked about 
the Socorro Case, where we both shared frustrated experiences with Lonnie Zamora. The possibility that 
the Socorro craft was an experimental prototype of a lunar module stayed with him for more than two 
decades, but he could never prove it. He also told me it was Blue Book's most important case, as you will 
see in his memoirs. 

Naturally, we also talked about his confrontations with Hynek, and the classic "swamp gas" episode. 
"He was of great help when it was misidentifications with stars and planets, but he was not happy when 
Dr. Condon and the University of Colorado entered in scene," continued Quintanilla. "Originally, I 
thought it was wrong to benefit financially from a book, but I wanted to share my knowledge and not let 
the information get lost." The original title was UFO's 20 Million Dollar Dilemma. But the most 



important thing he said was that he thought he would be able to resolve the UFO mystery, he was 
confident enough of finding a scientific explanation. 

Ten years ago he was still thinking that, "it's hard for me to believe that our ancestors were visited 
by extraterrestrials if I cannot put the finger on a vehicle. At the present, we don't conserve physical 
evidence. We can see or feel, concerning intelligent life as we are, when we should have the capacity of 
transportation through space from one point to the other." 

During the Second World War, Quintanilla went to school, and was drafted before finishing his 
freshman year. In the South Pacific theater, he was part of the 13th Air Force Squadron, and the 72nd 
Bombardier Unit. Back in school, he was recruited in January of 1946 as assistant in the "Air Force 
Security Service." Just when he was finishing school, the Korean War was in full action. 

During his last years, Quintanilla' s convictions toward the existence of the UFOs were hoping to 
find cases with more substance and information. For the last director of Project Blue Book, the "saucer 
shape was a configuration," a creation of the printed media in the early sixties, which followed one after 
another. 

Quintanilla' s bigger headache was the media, which always rushed in the moment of the press 
conferences, being more candid with the TV stations and networks. "The reporters always insisted I give 
the information before I finished the report, and then they put their own conclusions." Quintanilla always 
told both to the press and to himself, "I'm trying to be honest in the investigation and in the report." 

Despite the lack of physical evidence, Quintanilla felt that "it was egotistical for men to think that 
the Creator of all the beauty existed solely for our benefit; there should be extraterrestrials or intelligence 
in one of those multitude of stars." 

With the closing of Project Blue Book, a classic chapter of the American and international ufology 
came to an end. After that, no officially funded organization investigated the UFO phenomena in 
America. With its disappearance, many valuable experiences also departed, as almost no one took time in 
reviewing Blue Book when some of its cast and crew were still with us. 

Ufology has now survived over fifty years of incomprehension by the authorities, the public, and the 
ufologists themselves. The media, on the other hand, has shifted from laughing to exploiting the 
phenomena as a bait to increase ratings and multiply profits, mostly in prime time and cable 
programming. The remembrance of seven years of Quintanilla' s investigations is a lighthouse in the 
darkness, so much of it created by some modern mythologists of ufology who mistakenly put Blue Book 
in the bad boy's duffel bag. 

Yet Quintanilla didn't believe in any kind of conspiracy behind his back: "Everybody gave me the 
fullest cooperation, nobody refused, from the high level agencies to top laboratories to which I requested 
for help." It is possible, however, that before his time previous directors kept different approaches or 
agendas. 

Fortunately for researchers and aficionados, UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma has survived. It is a 
window to the past and a door to the future for all, especially for the younger generations of ufologists 
and scientists interested in the phenomena. Their cooperation is still urgently needed for advancing what 
is still a mystery in the 21st century. 

Los Angeles, California, 2-5-2001 



UFO'S: 
AN AIR FORCE DILEMMA 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 
USAF (ret.) 



UFO'S 

AN AIR FORCE DILEMMA 



Proposal For A Book by 

Lt. Colonel Hector Quintanilla, Jr. 
USAF (ret.) 

Former Chief, Project Blue Book 



iii 



Copyright © 1974. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any 
form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any 
information storage and retrieval system without permission in writing from the author. Printed in the 
United States of America. 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Suggested title: "UFO's — A $20,000,000 FIASCO" 

Theme: The behind-the-scenes story of an official Government project that cost the 

taxpayers $20,000,000, which tells why the project did not justify its cost. 



Method: Human-interest, anecdotal, and personalized: a dramatic portrait showing how 

Government machinery works behind-the-scenes when outside pressure is 
applied by the public. 

The Story: Project Blue Book, the world's only official organization to keep watch on 

and analyze Unidentified Flying Objects (UFO's), and how it stirred 
controversy both inside and outside the U.S. Air Force; its role in national 
defense and its misunderstood purpose; its history, critics, and friends; what it 
discovered. 



Author' s 
Qualifications: 



Chief of Project Blue Book for six and a half years, to the time it was 
discontinued after 20 years. 



V 



TABLE OF CONTENTS 

1. THE MAKING OF A UFO INVESTIGATING OFFICER 

My humble beginning as an immigrant Mexican, raised in the ghetto. Experience with my first 
UFO case and how this led to my appointment as the top Air Force UFO investigating officer. 
My battle with the press. 

2. UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS 

A short history of Air Force involvement in pursuit of the UFO. Development of the modern 
era of sky watching. 

3. A $20,000,000 FIASCO BEGINS 

The official conclusions, findings, and recommendations that established Projects Sign, 
Grudge, and finally, Blue Book. Why each of these UFO projects were inadequate to cope 
with the immediate problem and how they led from one into another. 

4. THE SCIENTIFIC PANEL OF 1953 

The five prominent scientists and their report on UFO's. Why the Central Intelligence Agency 
(CIA) classified the report Secret. The struggle to have the report declassified. The report as a 
milestone in the life of the UFO project. Instead of being terminated, the project continues 
because of negative inertia at the Air Technical Intelligence Center, where it was attacked. 

5. SPECIAL REPORT NUMBER 14 

Air Force Chief of Staff General White makes a statement on UFO's. Cost of Report #14 — 
$100,000 — was again a waste of taxpayer's money. Contents of this report, How Air 
Technical Intelligence Center again goofed. 

6. CONGRESS AND THE UFO'S 

The UFO hobby clubs apply pressure on the Congress. Tneir methods. How the Congress 
reacts. Congressman Karth replies to the Director of the National Investigations Committee on 
Aerial Phenomena. Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee replies to a request for 
Congress to investigate UFO's. 

7. UFO PUBLIC RELATIONS 

A new phase of official UFO public relations begins with the mysterious case at Socorro, New 
Mexico, a UFO sighting which gained national attention from the news media. Project Blue 
Book — previously closed to the press — now opens its doors to qualified reporters. Why it did. 

8. THE AIR FORCE UFO PROGRAM 

Network of UFO investigators, how they work. UFO categories and their unique 
characteristics as derived from case-histories of UFO sightings. 

9. UFO COLLECTION PROCEDURES 



Outline of the procedures for the collection and reporting of data on UFO's by Air Force 
intelligence officers, commercial airline pilots, and personnel at sea. Channels used for routing 
of the reports. 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



10. RETURN TO THE CONGRESS 

Project Blue Book is investigated by an independent committee appointed by the Air Force. 
Flying Saucers in Michigan receive national publicity that "reflects on Blue Book" and causes 
a renewed drive by the UFO hobby clubs for a Congressional investigation. L. Mendel Rivers, 
now Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee, pulls a coup by opening the doors of 
a closed hearing to the public and news media — the result is a circus in which the "clowns" 
are the UFO hobby club witnesses. The hearing and my meeting with Secretary of the Air 
Force before the meeting to brief him as a witness. 

11. dr. james Mcdonald makes the scene 

McDonald, the Air Force's Number One Critic is an atmospheric physicist. He confronts 
General Cruishank with "evidence" to prove that Project Blue Book was not adequately 
performing its investigations of UFO's and scares the General into yet another investigation of 
Blue Book. Getting pretty sick of all this, I request a transfer to another job. Background of 
my request. The Chief Scientist of the Foreign Technology Division (formerly the Air Force's 
Air Technical Intelligence Center) talks me into staying on a while longer as Chief of Project 
Blue Book. Why I agreed to stay. Other aspects of McDonald's campaign to "beef up" Blue 
Book: his Navy- sponsored trip to Australia and the UFO symposium in Congress that he 
instigated. 

12. PROJECT BLUE BOOK'S SCIENTIFIC CONSULTANT 

Dr. J. Allen Hynek, only authorized Blue Book Consultant for 20 years, now tries to run the 
show. My continuing battles with him over his public statements. The story behind Hynek' s 
determination to run the project, and events leading to his public statement at the 
Congressional hearing. How and why his consultant-contract was terminated by the Air Force. 

13. A PLAN TO END CONTROVERSY ONLY CREATES MORE OF THE SAME 

Decision to have a reputable university set up a non-partisan scientific committee to 
objectively evaluate UFO's and thus clear Blue Book of "whitewash" accusations by 
McDonald, Hynek, and the UFO hobby clubs. Search for a university to accept the Air Force 
contract. Many turndowns because of controversial nature of the subject. Finally, acceptance 
by the University of Colorado. Dr. Ed Condon takes the job as head of this scientific study out 
of sheer patriotism, knowing he will be the target of much criticism whatever are the results 
his committee comes up with. How the Condon Committee operated. His staff requests for 
UFO cases from my files. My observations about why those particular cases were requested. 
Attacks on the Condon Committee before the fact by McDonald, Hynek, and the National 
Academy of Sciences. Reaction of the press to this report. Why this reaction had much to do 
with closing down Project Blue Book. 

14. THE END IS PLANNED 

Events leading to the meeting where the end of Project Blue Book was planned. Who was 
there and what they said. The Air Force General Council holds up the meeting's decision. 
How the recommendation to end the project was coordinated. The Secretary of the Air Force 
announces the cancellation of Project Blue Book. 

15. THE END OF A $20,000,000 FIASCO 

Closing the project's office. Boxing the UFO case records for shipment to the Air Force 
Archives, where they are now available for study by qualified historians and other researchers. 



vii 

16. OBSERVATIONS OF AN EX-INVESTIGATING OFFICER (UFO) 

Some personal experiences and anecdotes while I was Chief of Project Blue Book. The people 
in my office. Why my black hair began to turn grey after six months on the Project. And other 
pertinent human details. 

BIBLIOGRAPHY 
NOTES 



DEDICATION 



TO GENE, TESSIE, KARL, NANCY, DIANE, AND BOB. 
YOU ARE MY CONTRIBUTION FOR TOMORROW'S BETTER WORLD. 



UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



UNIDENTIFIED OBJECTS 

Contrary to popular belief, unidentified objects are not a new phenomenon. Historians have 
been recording the sightings of unidentified objects since before the coming of Christ. Phenomena 
associated with unidentified objects have been reported by witnesses on land, sea, and in the air. The 
Air Force was concerned with "Unidentified Flying Objects" (UFO's) because of its responsibility in 
protecting our Air Space from foreign and alien powers. 

The Air Force defined a UFO as "any flying object which the witness failed to identify to his 
satisfaction and was officially reported to the Air Force". A UFO report required immediate action and 
was acted upon as soon as the witness reported his sighting to one of the Air Force bases within the 
continental limits of the United States. The U.S. Air Force did not investigate UFO's which were 
sighted in Foreign Countries. Air Attaches stationed in foreign posts did not investigate foreign UFO 
sightings, however, as a matter of courtesy, they did forward newspaper and magazine articles of the 
interesting cases. These second and third hand reports are normally considered worthless for a proper 
and serious evaluation. 

The modern era of UFO's can be dated from 24 June, 1947, when a civilian pilot named 
Kenneth Arnold made some rather strange airborne observations. The national news media and a 
number of poetic authors played up the observation to such an extent that the public was left with the 
impression that our planet had been visited by unknown vehicles from outer space. It was the poetic 
authors who coined the term "Flying Saucer" in describing the vehicle's aerodynamic configuration, 
and this term has been used synonymously with "Unidentified Flying Objects" ever since. 

SUPERSONIC SAUCERS 

On that fateful day, June 24, Kenneth Arnold was carrying out an intensive search over the 
beautiful airspace of Washington state. He was looking for a Marine transport that was reported to 
have crash landed somewhere on the southwest side of Mount Ranier. First he flew directly toward the 
mountain from the west at an altitude of approximately 9500 feet, searching all of the various ridges 
for the downed plane. Then he made a sweep back to the west, found nothing, and headed again 
toward Mount Ranier. The air was so smooth that he felt a real pleasure in flying; he trimmed out the 
aircraft and relaxed, admiring the crystal-clear sky and the terrain. There was a DC-4 in the area, 
however, it was to his left and to the rear at approximately 1400 feet. 

Arnold had flown for about two or three minutes on this course when a bright flash reflected 
on his airplane. He could not find where the reflection had come from, but to the left, north of Mount 
Ranier, he did observe a chain of nine peculiar looking objects flying from north to south at 
approximately 9500 feet. They were approaching Mount Ranier very rapidly, and he at first assumed 
them to be jet aircraft. Every few seconds two or three of them would dip or change course slightly, so 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



3 



as to catch the sun at an angle and reflect brightly. They were too far away from him to determine their 
shape or formation. 

As they approached Mount Ranier, however, he observed their oudine quite clearly — except 
that, oddly, he could not find their tails. He watched them pass the southern edge of Mount Ranier 
flying directly south- southeast down the hog's back of a range. Their elevation seemed to vary by as 
much as one thousand feet, but they remained very near the horizon, therefore, around his own 
elevation. They flew rather like geese, in a diagonal chain as though they were linked together. They 
seemed to maintain their orientation while swerving in and out of the high mountain peaks. 

Arnold estimated the distance from him to the objects at approximately 25 miles. Using a Zeus 
fastener and a cowling tool, he estimated their size to be about two-thirds that of the DC-4. Watching 
them pass a high snow-covered ridge between Mount Ranier and Mount Adams, he saw that as the 
first object was leaving its south crest the last one was entering its northern crest. Later the length of 
this ridge, and therefore that of the chain of objects, was determined to be about five miles. Arnold 
timed their flights from Mount Ranier to Mount Adams, 47 miles at 1 minute 42 seconds, a speed of 
1659 miles per hour. 

The sighting, like most of those that were reported to the Air Force, was not reproducible for 
purposes of investigation; it involved uncontrollable atmospheric conditions and personal 
interpretations of distances which were subject to human error. The Air Force was left with one man's 
subjective interpretation of what he had experienced. Lucy Floyd, of the Air Technical Intelligence 
Center, was awakened on a Saturday morning at the ungodly hour of nine o'clock. She was requested 
to come to the Center and take the UFO information of Arnold's sighting over the telephone. Lucy's 
short hand wasn't up to par on that Saturday morning, but she struggled through it because the news 
media and the Pentagon wanted an instant evaluation. Lucy transcribed the information, however, an 
instant evaluation was not forthcoming because there were too many gaps in the preliminary 
information which had been submitted to the ATIC. 

Up to this point, the Air Technical Intelligence Center (ATIC), had concerned itself with real 
technical intelligence problems dealing with our national security. Their engineers and scientists are 
top shelf and a very proud group. Little did they know, at the time that a pseudo scientific project was 
about to be dropped in their laps. I would admit that on a short term basis the ATIC was a good choice 
for project responsibilities, but on a long term basis it turned out to be a monumental headache for all 
its Commanders. Their impatience at certain times was justified, however, this attitude made it very 
difficult for the project officer's and at times it was just pure hell. With Lucy Floyd's telephone call 
began a series of events which would make ATIC Commanders cringe on hearing the term "Flying 
Saucers". The modem era of UFO sightings had begun and the ATIC had just laid the ground work for 
the evaluation of such sightings by accepting one telephone call. Of such circumstances, are projects 
made in the Air Force? Not hardly, but in this particular case it was the beginning of a $20,000,000 
boondoggle. 

Contrary to the biased criticism which the Air Force received in this case, it did everything 
possible to find an honest solution to this sighting. Arnold's report of his sighting was submitted to 
various scientific groups and invariably they concluded that the objects were probably the result of a 



4 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



mirage. The smooth, crystal-clear air that he so ably noted indicated the very stable conditions which 
are associated with Inversions and a high index of refraction of the atmosphere. UFO buffs like to 
refer to this sighting as one of the classics, however, mirages and inversions are quite common and 
they can also be very exciting under certain emotional conditions. 

Mr. Arnold and the UFO buffs have never accepted the Air Force's evaluation of this sighting 
and thousands of words have been written in support of their belief that our planet was and has been 
invaded by alien space ships from another Galaxy. A number of books have been written to support 
this theory, however, time and history have shown us that the followers of this philosophy were 
dreaming. It has been my experience that the true UFO buff is a dreamer and for parts of his day lives 
in a world of fantasy. It is unfortunate, but a number of these people have ceased to live in our real 
world. I bring this out, because I have had to deal with people from both extremes and this was a most 
difficult task. 

Although Arnold's sighting and experience could not be reproduced, another phenomenon in 
some respects similar and observed in the same area found a satisfactory explanation. Navy 
Commander WJ. Young reported in November, 1948, that on several occasions he had seen 
reflections over the Willamette Valley and in the plains of eastern Washington and Oregon that could 
easily have been mistaken for flying discs. One striking example occurred over the Willamette Valley 
on a clear sunny day when the ever-present blue haze seemed somewhat thicker than usual. His 
aircraft was flying at altitudes between 1000 and 5000 feet when bright flying objects appeared, some 
on his beam and others on the bows or dead ahead. From time to time they would disappear and new 
ones would appear. Young finally determined that the objects which appeared to be discs at various 
altitudes were reflections of the sun from the aluminum roofs of farm buildings at great distances from 
his plane. The perspective of the land converging with the sky on the horizon, with limited ground 
visibility, made it appear as though roof reflections were actually airborne at various altitudes in the 
haze. Thus one UFO sighting was solved by the observer himself. Although there is no uniform 
pattern among reported UFO phenomena, some characteristics of one may be found in others, as in 
Young's and Arnold's. 

THE BEGINNING OF A $20,000,000 FIASCO— PROJECT SIGN 

News media publicity of Arnold's flying saucers started an avalanche of other sightings. The 
Air Force began receiving flying saucer reports from people in all walks of life. Before December, 
1947, no specific government organization was responsible for investigating and evaluating UFO 
sightings. Without any basis in measurable data or controlled experiment, the reported phenomena 
were variously assessed. Even within the military structure, UFO sightings were evaluated as being a 
new aerodynamic configuration, natural occurrences, misinterpretation of conventional objects, or to 
space ships under intelligent control. The military interest in these reports touched the fields of Air 
Defense, Research and Development, and Intelligence; responsibilities which were vested in many 
different organizations. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



5 



In our bureaucratic form of government, decisions made at intermediate levels sometimes 
have rational impact. It is apparent that some such group within the old Air Material Command, now 
designated as the Air Force Logistics Command, expressed an opinion regarding "Flying Discs" which 
eventually was formulated into policy and which also caused the formation of a special project. I 
present the opinionated letter in its entirety so that the reader may follow chronologically the events 
which led to the formation of a special project which eventually cost the American taxpayer at least 
$20,000,000. 

Subject: AMC Opinion Concerning "Flying Discs" 23 Sept 1947 

To: Commanding General 

Army Air Forces 

Washington 25, D.C. 

Attention: Brig. General George Schulgen 

AC/AS-2 

1. As requested by AC/AS-2 there is presented below the considered opinion of this 
Command concerning the so-called "Flying Discs". This opinion is based on interrogation report data 
furnished by AC/AS-2 and preliminary studies by personnel of T-2 and Aircraft Laboratory, 
Engineering Division T-3. This opinion was arrived at in a conference between personnel from the Air 
Institute of Technology, Intelligence T-2, Office Chief of Engineering Division, and the Aircraft, Power 
Plant and Propeller Laboratories of Engineering Division T-3. 

2. It is the opinion that: 

a. The phenomenon reported is something real and not visionary or 

fictitious. 

b. Three [sic] are objects probably approximating the shape of a disc, of 
such appreciable size as to appear to be as large as man-made aircraft. 

c. There is a possibility that some of the incidents may be caused by 
natural phenomena, such as meteors. 

d. The reported operating characteristics such as extreme rates of climb, 
maneuverability (particularly in a roll), and action which must be considered evasive 
when sighted or contacted by friendly aircraft and radar, lend belief to the possibility 
that some of the objects are controlled either manually, automatically, or remotely. 

e. The apparent common description of objects is as follows: 

( 1 ) Metallic or light reflecting surface. 

(2) Absence of trail, except in a few instances when the object 
apparently was operating under high performance conditions. 

(3) Circular or elliptical in shape, flat on bottom and domed on 
top. 

(4) Several reports of well kept formation flights varying from 
three to nine objects. 

(5) Normally no associated sound, except in three instances a 
substantial rumbling roar was noted. 

(6) Level flight speeds normally above 300 knots are estimated. 

g. Any developments in this country along the lines indicated would be 
extremely expensive, time consuming and at the considerable expense of current 
projects and therefore, if directed, should be set up independently of existing projects. 

h. Due consideration must be given the following: 

(1) The possibility that these objects are of domestic origin — the 
product of some high security project not known to AC/AS-2 
or this Command. 



6 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



(2) The lack of physical evidence in the shape of crash recovered 
exhibits which would undeniably prove the existence of 
these objects. 

(3) The possibility that some foreign nation has a form of 
propulsion possibly nuclear; which is outside of our domestic 
knowledge. 

3. It is recommended that : 

a. Headquarters, Army Air Forces issues a directive assigning a priority, 
security classification and Code Name for a detailed study of this matter to include the 
preparation of complete sets of all available and pertinent data which will then be 
made available to the Army, Navy, Atomic Energy Commission, JRDB, the Air Force 
Scientific Advisory Group, NACA, and the RAND and NEPA projects for comments 
and recommendations, with a preliminary report to be forwarded within 15 days of 
receipt of the data and a detailed report thereafter every 30 days as the investigation 
develops. A complete interchange of data should be effected. 

4. Awaiting a specific directive AMC will continue the investigation wthin its 
current resources in order to more closely define the nature of the phenomenon. Detailed Essential 
Elements of Information will be formulated immediately for transmittal thru channels. 

N.F. TWINING 

Lieutenant General, U.S.A. 
Commanding 

To end the confusion of multi-organizations involving themselves in the investigation of the 
UFO, Major General L.C. Craigie, Director of Research and Development directed the Commanding 
General of the Air Material Command to establish a project whose rrission was to collect, collate, 
evaluate, and distribute within the government all information concerning sightings which could be 
construed as of concern to the national security. The letter was dated 30 December, 1947, and carried a 
security classification of Secret. The letter was subsequently declassified. The letter also assigned a 
priority of 2A, a security classification of "restricted" and a Code Name of "Sign" to this special 
project. I think it is important, because of subsequent events, to bring out that the security 
classification of "restricted" was the lowest security classification which could be assigned to a special 
project. It should also interest the reader to know that Code Names are normally one word designators 
and carry a security classification, while nick names are normally two words and are not classified. 

The Commanding General of AMC issued Technical Instruction Nr 2185, dated 11 February 
1948, and assigned responsibility of project SIGN to the Air Technical Intelligence Center. The ATIC 
immediately began to organize the project and established the communications necessary to collect 
and investigate the UFO reports from throughout the United States. In talking to some of the old 
timers that are still around, such as I.H. Herman, Nick Post, V.D. Bryant, Dr. Miley, and Francis 
Arcier, I get the impression that not all of them were sold on the project, but they had been given a 
task to do and they went all out to accomplish the mission. 

Project SIGN accomplished and completed its task in February, 1949. It had thoroughly 
analyzed and evaluated 243 cases which had been submitted to the project office. The bound 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



7 



document was small, but thorough and comprehensive. The report was classified Secret at the start, 
but was declassified a short time later. 
Project SIGN concluded that: 

No definite and conclusive evidence is yet available that would prove or disprove the 
existence of these unidentified objects as real aircraft of unknown and unconventional 
configuration. It is unlikely that positive proof of their existence will be obtained without 
examination of the remains of crashed objects. Proof of non-existence is equally impossible to 
obtain unless a reasonable and convincing explanation is determined for each incident. 

Many sightings by qualified and apparently reliable witnesses have been reported. However, 
each incident has unsatisfactory features, such as shortness of time under observation, distance 
from observer, vagueness of description, or photographs, inconsistencies between individual 
observers, and lack of descriptive data, that prevents definite conclusions from being drawn. 
Explanations, of some of the incidents revealed the existence of simple and easily 
understandable causes, so that there is the possibility that enough incidents can be solved to 
eliminate or greatly reduce the mystery associated with these occurrences. 

Evaluation of reports of unidentified objects is a necessary activity of military intelligence 
agencies. Such sightings are inevitable, and under wartime conditions rapid and convincing 
solutions of such occurrences are necessary to maintain morale of military and civilian 
personnel. In this respect, it is considered that the establishment of procedures and training of 
personnel is in itself worth the effort expended on this project. 

It is also recommended that: 

Future activity on this project should be carried on at the minimum level necessary to record, 
summarize, and evaluate the data received on future reports and to command if a sufficient 
number of incidents are solved to indicate that these sightings do not represent a threat to the 
security of the nation, the assignment of special project status to the activity could be 
terminated. Future investigations of reports would then be handled on a routine basis like any 
other intelligence work. 

Reporting agencies should be impressed with the necessity for getting more factual evidence 
on sightings, such as photographs, physical evidence, radar sightings, and data on size and 
shape. Personnel sighting such objects should engage the assistance of others, when possible, 
to get more definite data. For example, military pilots should notify neighboring bases by radio 
of the presence and direction of flight of an unidentified object so that other observers, in flight 
or on the ground, could assist in its identification. 

By today's standards the Project Sign report would have been unacceptable as far as 
publishing a bound document is concerned. The report is small, poorly typed, and the individual pages 
are of a very low grade quality paper. The report doesn't look like much, but its contents are 
informative and some of the conclusions expressed by the report are still valid today. The report had 
very little impact, pro or con, in government agencies and the pursuit of the UFO became a legitimate 
full time government job for a number of USAF officers and enlisted men who were involuntarily 
appointed to those positions by their immediate superiors. The die had been cast and UFO's would be 
a USAF stigma for the next 21 years. It began with a small office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, 
and within a few short years the lines of communication would extend to every Air Force Base within 
the continental limits of the United States. 



8 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



PROJECT GRUDGE 

Project SIGN was terminated after it had submitted its report. The conclusions of SIGN were 
widely distributed amongst government agencies. Although SIGN found no evidence to support the 
FLYING SAUCER theory, the project was continued under a new code name, "GRUDGE". The code 
name was changed on 16 December 1948. Project GRUDGE continued the operations of SIGN except 
that the personnel in GRUDGE relied heavily on the work of university scientists and other outside 
consultants, as well as the USAF Air Weather Service and the U.S. Weather Bureau. During the period 
of GRUDGE the project officer was Lt. H.W. Smith who is now a full Colonel stationed in Europe. 
His number one assistant was George W. Towles who is still with the organization, but has been 
employed in another capacity since the report was submitted. The report is a voluminous document 
one and one half inches thick and contains summaries of each one of the cases that was analyzed and 
evaluated. These cases were evaluated and are individually discussed by: Dr. J.A. Hynek, who was 
then an Astronomer at Ohio State University; Dr. GE. Valley, from the Scientific Advisory Board; Dr. 
P.M. Fitts, Psychologist at the Aero Medical Laboratory; Mr. J.E. Lipp, of the Rand Corporation; and 
the USAF Weather Service. General Harold E. Watson was the Commanding Officer of ATIC during 
this period and he accepted the GRUDGE report in August of 1949. The report was classified Secret 
and it was not until August 1, 1952, that it was declassified. It was declassified, according to existing 
regulations, by Captain Edward Ruppett who was then Chief of the project office. 

Project GRUDGE concluded that: 

1. Evaluation of reports of unidentified flying objects to date demonstrate that these 
flying objects constitute no direct threat to the national security of the United States. 

2. Reports of unidentified flying objects are the result of: 



b. 



c. 



a. 



Misinterpretation of various conventional objects. 
A mild form of mass hysteria or "war nerves". 

Individuals who fabricate such reports to perpetrate a hoax cr to seek 



d. 



publicity. 

Psychopathological persons. 



3. 



Planned release of unusual aerial objects coupled with the release of related 
psychological propaganda could cause mass hysteria. 



[LOST DATA BOTTOM PAGE 12.] 



enemy would yield similar results. 



Project GRUDGE recommended: 



1 



That the investigation and study of reports of unidentified flying objects be reduced in 



scope. 



a. 



That current collection directives relative to unidentified flying objects be 
revised to provide for the submission of only those reports clearly indicating 
realistic technical applications. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



9 



2. That Conclusions 1 and 2 of this report, with sufficient supporting data, be 
declassified and made public in the form of an official press release. 

3. That psychological Warfare Division and other governmental agencies interested in 
psychological warfare be informed of the results of this study. 

a. That such agencies coordinate in and provide further recommendations for 
public release of material as recommended in Para. 2 above. 

In spite of the fact that GRUDGE recommended that the investigations of UFO's be reduced 
in scope, there are definite indications that the project expanded. The soothing conclusions of Project 
GRUDGE caused very little comment, nevertheless, the fringe groups that still believed in 
extraterrestrial visitation was growing with the popularity of science fiction articles and magazines. In 
December, 1951, GRUDGE let a contract to a reputable industrial firm for a detailed study of all the 
UFO cases on file. The firm used its top-notch engineering personnel and scientific consultants in 
evaluating all of the Air Force UFO reports. The study took three years to complete. It was during the 
time that the study was in progress that the Air Force decided to change the project code name from 
GRUDGE to the nick name "Blue Book." 

PROJECT BLUE BOOK 

"Blue Book" came into its own in March, 1952, and the nick name stayed with the project 
until it was terminated on 29 December 1969 (or 70?). When the Air Force designated the project with 
a nick name, it also declassified the project's special security classification. 

During the early phase of Project Blue Book (1952-1954), it attracted a public relations aspect 
that remained with it until its termination. This came about through a national interest in reported 
sightings, science-fiction publications of alleged contacts with visitors form outer space, formation of 
pseudo- scientific organizations, hobby clubs, and self-appointed individuals who investigated UFO 
sightings. The radar sightings in Washington D.C. during July 1952, tended to give substance to UFO 
reports. News coverage during this period was extremely high and poetic authors with imaginative 
minds were busy grinding out books and articles on UFO's. A few representative titles which appeared 
during that time are: THE COMING OF THE SAUCERS; SPACE, GRAVITY, AND THE FLYING 
SAUCER; IS ANOTHER WORLD WATCHING?; THE FLYING SAUCERS ARE REAL; FLYING 
SAUCERS FROM OUTER SPACE; and FLYING SAUCERS COME FROM A DISTANT WORLD. 
Flying saucer watching became a popular hobby and numerous UFO clubs were formed throughout 
the country. At one time, I listed eighty-one such clubs paying dues in the United States. Most of these 
clubs were small and were organized at the community level. They met periodically and at these 
meetings discussed their UFO experiences. Among this group of eighty-one UFO hobby clubs is one 
national club which I'll discuss later. 

THE SCIENTIFIC PANEL OF 1953 

It had become fashionable in the early fifties to accuse the Air Force of censorship or of 
withholding UFO information from the public. It was because of these accusations, that a Blue Ribbon 



10 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



panel was appointed to make an authoritive evaluation of the UFO phenomena. The panel was 
appointed and subsequently met in January, 1953. This panel, which was composed of civilian 
scientists holding positions outside the government, was well known and respected. This scientific 
Advisory Panel was chaired by Dr. H.P. Robertson, Chairman, California Institute of Technology. The 
other members of the panel were: Dr. Luis W. Alvarez, University of California; Dr. Lloyd V. 
Berkner, Associated Universities, Inc.; Dr. S.A. Goudsmit, Brookhaven National Laboratories; and Dr. 
Thornton Page, Johns Hopkins University. All of these gentlemen held the highest credentials in their 
field of expertise. 

The panel met in Washington D.C. during the week of 14-18 January, 1953. Special briefings 
and all UFO records were made available to this select group. Members selected unique and 
interesting UFO reports for their in-depth study. After three days of tedious briefings, reviews, 
discussions, consultations, and serious study, the panel completed its report and issued their statement, 
which later became public. One of the members of the panel remarked to me, that if hey had 
anticipated that the complete report would some day be made public, they would have spent more time 
with the final wording of the report. As it was, some parts of the report were sort of rough, however, it 
was considered adequate for inter-governmental distribution. Some critics of the report made an issue 
of the final wording, done for the sake of receiving free publicity and also to detract from the 
conclusions which were reached by the panel. Their conclusions were as follows: 

REPORT ON UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS— 17 January 1953 

1. The Panel of Scientific Consultants has met to evaluate any possible threat to national 
security posed by Unidentified Flying Objects ("Flying Saucers"), and to make 
recommendations thereon. The Panel has received the evidence as presented by cognizant 
intelligence agencies, primarily the Air Technical Intelligence Center, and has reviewed a 
selection of the best documented incidents. 

2. As a result of its considerations, the Panel concludes: That the evidence presented on 
Unidentified Flying Objects shows no indication that these phenomena constitute a direct 
physical threat to national security. 

We firmly believe that there is no residuum of cases which indicates phenomena which are 
attributable to foreign artifacts capable of hostile acts, and that there is no evidence that the 
phenomena indicate a need for the revision of current scientific concepts. 

3. In order most effectively to strengthen the national facilities for the timely recognition and 
the appropriate handling of true indications of hostile action, and to minimize the concomitant 
dangers alluded to above, the Panel recommends: 

That the national security agencies take immediate steps to strip the Unidentified Flying 
Objects of the special status they have been given and the aura of mystery they have 
unfortunately acquired. 

We suggest that this aim may be achieved by an integrated program designed to reassure the 
public of the total lack of evidence of inimical forces behind the phenomena, to train personnel 
to recognize and reject false indications quickly and effectively, and to strengthen regular 
channels for the evaluation of and prompt reaction to true indications of hostile measures. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



11 



The short statement which was issued by the panel at the conclusion of their study, did not 
indicate the amount of work or the number of man-hours spent in accomplishing their task. The 
conclusion reached by the panel was no different than those reached by other groups who had 
seriously studied the UFO problem. Up to this time, the program had been treated as some sort of 
plague by the Intelligence community. However, after the panel issued its statement, the Pentagon 
decided to publicly acknowledge its problems with the UFO program. It was during this period that 
the program slowly started to acquire a public relations aspect which lasted until its termination. 

THE CIA CLASSIFIES THE REPORT 

At this time I would like to point out that the panel's complete report was classified up until 
March 1967. It was a hell of a battle getting the CIA to declassify the report. How the CIA got 
involved in the UFO problem is still a mystery to me. It appears that some CIA members attended the 
special briefings given to the panel and the recorder mentioned their position within the organization. 
Because sensitive positions were mentioned in the report, the CIA classified the document. I read the 
report numerous times and I couldn't see any reason why the document should have stayed classified 
after so many years. I decided to stay within channels and yet the report declassified. The report was a 
"hot potato" because of its classification and not because of its contents. I convinced Lt. Col. Robert 
Hippler of the Office of Science and Technology, my contact on the Air Staff, to use the power of the 
Air Staff to get the report declassified. Sara Hunt, of The Secretary of the Air Force Office of 
Information, offered her help from that level. The CIA would not consent to declassifying the report 
initially, but we weren't to be denied. Hippler was dogmatic and he followed the initial requests with 
repeated requests. The CIA finally consented to our requests for declassification with the condition 
that certain names of individuals and internal organizations be deleted from the report. These names 
and internal organizations neither added nor detracted from the completed report so we agreed. 

It took us months to finally get the report declassified. We talked, we corresponded, we met, 
we discussed, we telephoned, we convinced our superiors, and finally the CIA conceded after we 
compromised. The majority of the credit for declassifying the report should go to Robert Hippler. The 
Panel Report is now available to the public for a fixed fee. 

Here again, the amount of work and man-hours spent in getting the report declassified would 
amaze millions of people. Some individuals within our government structure refuse to bend or to 
change and these "jellyfish" cause other members of the government numerous headaches and a 
tremendous amount of extra work. 

When the Scientific Panel report was declassified, it did not cause the CIA any embarrassment 
and the truth of the matter is that the Air Force enjoyed a favorable press; because we had managed to 
hurdle another obstacle in the pursuit of the truth with regards to the elusive UFO. 



12 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



THE PROJECT CONTINUES 

Why the Air Force continued to investigate UFO sightings after Dr. Robertson issued his 
report is still puzzling to me. The SIGN and GRUDGE reports which had been completed earlier 
indicated that UFO's were not a threat to our security and that available evidence indicated that this 
was not a new phenomena. Among the old timers, opinion seemed to be divided as to why a 
determined effort was not made to cancel the UFO project after Dr. Robertson completed his report. 
After taking everything into consideration, I have the feeling that inertia was lacking in the Project 
Office at the time. People were running around the country investigating UFO sightings and they 
never had time to sit back and examine the project objectively. This was back in the days when UFO 
investigating officers had a B-25 at their disposal which enabled them to react immediately to UFO 
sightings that were called in to the ATIC. I have examined the available correspondence of this period 
and there is no indication that anyone made a determined effort to cancel the UFO project. Everyone 
just seemed to react and this attitude persisted in the project for many years. If the Air Force had 
cancelled the project in 1953, the American taxpayer would have been saved at least $15,000,000, 
which to me is a hell of a lot of money! 

The panel had recommended that the national security agencies take immediate steps to strip 
the Unidentified Flying Objects of the special status which they had been given and to remove the aura 
of mystery which the project had unfortunately acquired. It was because of this recommendation that a 
special office was established within the OFFICE OF INFORMATION at the Air Force Secretary's 
level. It's primary function was to answer questions from the public and periodically, as requested, 
release UFO information to the Communications Media. Throughout the years, the responsibility for 
releasing UFO information to the public has remained with the Secretary of the Air Force, Office of 
Information (SAFOI). 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 13 



SPECIAL REPORT #14 



14 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



It was late in 1954 that the special UFO report was finished and published. The report is 
commonly referred to as Special Report Number 14, because the first 13 reports were administrative 
progress reports which dealt mostly with fiscal matters. It was released under ATIC cover, however, 
all of the work was done by engineers, scientists, and consultants, who were not connected with the 
ATIC. The truth of the matter is that the report was compiled by one of the most reputable firms in this 
country. Their scientific and engineering qualifications were without a doubt the best that could be 
found in any organization. All of the work which was done on Special Report #14 was done on their 
premises by their own people. The project people traveled frequently from ATIC to their location for 
conferences and consultations. It would be easy for me to give you the name of this most prestigious 
organization, but it would serve no purpose, and in the end it would certainly do them more harm than 
good. I am honor bound not to release their name and I intend to keep my promise. 

The report evaluated all the UFO data available at Air Technical Intelligence Center. The 
report is comprehensive, detailed, readable, well done, and technically suitable for research. It contains 
graphs showing the frequency distribution of sightings by time, date, location, shape, color, duration, 
azimuth, and elevation. All of the information recorded in the UFO files was broken down into 
meaningful and essential information. The information was punched on IBM cards and then 
manipulated accordingly. From the information on the cards, an attempt was made to build a model of 
a typical UFO. The result was that instead of one model, the report ended up with 13 models. The 
ultimate conclusion was that UFO's come in all sizes, shapes, and colors. 

Although the report was finished in 1954, it was not publicly released until May 5, 1955. I 
have not been able to find out what caused the delay, however, I suspect that it was poor and 
inefficient staffing. General Sanford held a news conference at the Pentagon on May 5, 1955, and 
released Special Report Number 14 to the Communications Media. Seventy-five reports were 
distributed to the Communications Media. It's findings were well received, however, the project 
continued on and on and on. . . 

A synopsis of the conclusions of Special Report Number 14 are as follows: 

EXTRACT FROM SPECIAL REPORT #14, RELEASE DATE: 5 May 55 

CONCLUSIONS 

"It can never be absolutely proven that "flying saucers" do not exist. This would be true of 
the data obtained were to include complete scientific measurements of the attributes of each 
sighting, as well as complete and detailed descriptions of the objects sighted. It might be 
possible to demonstrate the existence of "flying saucers" with data of this type, IF they were to 
exist. 

Although the reports considered in this study usually did not contain scientific 
measurements of the attributes of each sighting, it was possible to establish certain valid 
conclusions by the application of statistical methods in the treatment of the data. Scientifically 
evaluated and arranged, the data as a whole did not show any marked patterns or trends. The 
inaccuracies inherent in this type of data, in addition to the incompleteness of a large 
proportion of the reports, may have obscured any patterns or trends that otherwise would have 
been evident. This absence of indicative relationships necessitated an exhaustive study of 
selected facets of the data in order to draw any valid conclusions. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



15 



A critical examination of the distributions of the important characteristics of sightings, plus 
an intensive study of the sightings evaluated as UNKNOWN, led to the conclusion that a 
combination of factors, principally the reported maneuvers of the objects and the unavailability 
of supplemental data such as aircraft flight plans or balloon-launching records, resulted in the 
failure to identify as KNOWNS most of the reports of objects classified as UNKNOWNS. 

An intensive study, aimed at finding a verified example of a "flying saucer" or at deriving 
a verified model or models of "flying saucers" (as defined on page 1), led to the conclusion 
that neither goal could be attained using the present data. 

It is emphasized that there was a complete lack of any valid evidence of physical matter in 
any case of a reported unidentified aerial object. 

Thus, the probability that any of the UNKNOWNS considered in this study are "flying 
saucers" is concluded to be extremely small, since the most complete and reliable reports from 
the present data, when isolated and studied, conclusively failed to reveal even a rough model, 
and since the data as a whole failed to reveal any marked patterns or trends. 

Therefore, on the basis of this evaluation of the information, it is considered to be highly 
improbably that any of the reports of unidentified aerial objects examined in this study 
represent observations of technological developments outside the range of present-day 
scientific knowledge." 

The report was a project officer's dream, but as it turned out, it really served no purpose. Here 
was a means to an end, but someone fumbled the ball and again an opportunity was missed to 
terminate the project. 

ATIC GOOFED 

After Special Report Number 14 was released to the public, General White had suggested that 
total responsibility of the UFO Program be turned over to a contractor. There were indications that 
serious and careful consideration was given to this proposal, however, the alternate proposals offered 
by the ATIC indicate that someone was reluctant to get rid of the program. General White wanted to 
reduce the load placed on the Air Force by the UFO Program and his concern was perfectly valid. The 
alternate proposals offered by the ATIC on 7 July 1955 were as follows: 

(a) That the Air Force Information Office issue a news release and state the following: 

(1) That Air Force experience of UFO reports, during a period of seven years, gives no 
indication that these phenomena constitute a direct physical threat to the national 
security. 

(2) That undue emphasis on the reports of such phenomena interferes with the proper 
functioning of our Air Defense measures. 

(3) That the Air Force has a policy of continuing watchfulness for and thorough analysis of 
apparently unexplainable UFO sightings; and 

(4) That for the purpose of divesting UFO's of the aura of mystery which they have 
unfortunately acquired, the entire subject has been completely declassified. 

The second paragraph of the alternate proposals was the crux of the whole letter. It goes as follows: 

2. The considerations behind the alternate measures which we had suggested 
above are involved, but we believe, compelling. The principal one, no doubt, is 
the fact that complete reliance on a contractor, were this possible, would not, in 



16 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



our experience, reduce the responsibility of and therefore the load carried by the 
Air Force. Neither would it save Air Force personnel or the Service the 
embarrassment occasioned by unscrupulous individuals who see in the subject an 
opportunity of abusing the Air Force while serving their own ends, be they 
personal gain or subversion. 

Here again was another opportunity to get rid of the program or at least divorce it from the 
Intelligence Community, but someone really dropped the ball. Someone within the ATIC sold General 
Watson a bill of goods and he bought it hook, line, and sinker. I'm not sure who these individuals 
were, but the fact remains that no other Commander was ever given the opportunity to rid himself of 
the project the way General Watson was. I'm not sure that I have the right to criticize General Watson 
for this decision, because I understand that he was a straight arrow and a hell of a good commander. 
He must have been a very compassionate man, because the reply to General White's proposal 
indicates that he had an idiot on his staff. 

THE AIR FORCE UFO REGULATION 

It's quite apparent that the Pentagon bought the proposal, and the UFO program continued 
under the auspices of the Air Technical Intelligence Center (ATIC). It amazes me, but it doesn't 
surprise me, that some people just don't like to rock the boat. Back when the program started, there 
was a valid reason for studying UFO's within an intelligence agency. At the beginning, there was 
sincere concern that maybe a foreign power was penetrating our air space with a new and superior 
weapons system designed as a disc or saucer. SIGN, GRUDGE, THE SCIENTIFIC PANEL, and 
SPECIAL REPORT NUMBER 14, all concluded that the intelligence community's basic concern was 
not valid. The Soviets were not penetrating our air space with a new aerodynamic configuration; hell, 
they were just as confused about the UFO phenomena as we were. I'm sure they were looking to us for 
a solution to this problem. It should have been apparent to many people then, that the UFO program 
didn't belong in intelligence channels. This became apparent to many people years later. In the 
meantime, the Air Force took one hell of a beating from self-styled UFO experts, UFO Hobby Clubs, 
and poetic authors. One of the reasons the Air Force took a beating was that detractors often referred 
to Air Force Regulation 200-2. This regulation outlines the objectives, scope, responsibilities, and 
procedures of the UFO program. In 1953, the Air Force recognized the need for a regulation; because 
up to that time, the program had been operating under the authority of administrative and technical 
letters. The regulation standardized the procedures of investigation and also the reports submitted to 
the Central Office. The objectives of the program were very simple and are as follows: 

To determine if UFO phenomena present a threat to the security of the United States. 

To determine if UFO phenomena exhibit any technological advances which could be 

channeled into U.S. research and development. 
To explain or identify the stimuli which caused the observer to report a UFO. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



17 



This regulation has always been unclassified and has always been made available to the news media, 
but the detractors and critics always harped on the fact that the "200 Series" is reserved for 
Intelligence. They failed to realize that the Intelligence Community has the best communications 
facilities available; therefore, if you want to transmit your information rapidly, then use your 
Intelligence channels. It Bally didn't matter whether the Air Force had an excellent collecting and 
evaluating UFO system, the critics were going to have a field day; because the only way for them to 
survive was to criticize the program's personnel, system, and methods. The regulation turned out to be 
a good one, and it did the job it was designed to do. 

Much has been said about the Air Force's alleged secret reporting procedures, which in reality 
is pure hogwash. There were two official reporting formats and procedures for reporting UFO's. The 
first one was the CIRVIS REPORTING PROCEDURES, which is part of COMMUNICATIONS 
PROCEDURES 111-55. These instructions are unclassified and have been made available to news 
media representatives. The first four parts of the instructions are as follows: 

I. CIRVIS 

United States/Canadian Military Communications Instructions for reporting Vital 
Intelligence Sightings from Aircraft to extend the early warning coverage for the 
Air Defense of the United States and Canada, their territories and possessions. 

II. WHO REPORTS 

A. Pilots of all U.S. and Canadian scheduled and non-scheduled air carriers 
and other civil aircraft. 

B. U.S and Canadian military aircraft except when the purpose of CIRVIS is 
achieved by other reporting procedures established by the appropriate 
Command Headquarters. 

III. HOW AND WHEN TO REPORT 

A. The procedures used by aircraft in calling the ground stations will be 
similar to those used when transmitting position reports except the call 
will be preceded by the world CIRVIS (pronounced SUR VEES) spoken 
three (3) times to clear the frequency(ies) over all other communications, 
except DISTRESS, URGENCY, and SAFETY. 

B. Should the instance occur, where the above procedure fails to clear the 
frequency(ies) the international Urgency signal "XXX" transmitted three 
(3) times or "Pan" spoken three (3) times will be employed as an alternate 
signal. 

C. CIRVIS reports should be transmitted in plain language to any of the 
following U.S. or Canadian communications facilities, as appropriated, 
for the aircraft making the report: 

1. FAA or DOT Stations 

2. Company or AIRNIC Stations 

3. Military Airways or other Military Stations 



18 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



D. Report at any time over international waters and territory under control of 
the United States or Canada. CIRVIS reports will not be transmitted by 
radio while over foreign territory, other than Greenland or Iceland, but 
will be transmitted as soon as practicable upon leaving foreign territorial 
boundaries. Canada and the United States are not considered foreign 
territory for either country for the purpose of CIRVIS Communications. 

IV. WHAT TO REPORT 

A. Report immediately by radio except when on foreign territory: 

1. Hostile or unidentified single aircraft or formations of aircraft which 
appear to be directed against the United States, Canada, or their 
forces. 

2. Missiles. 

3. Unidentified Flying Objects. 

4. Hostile or unidentified group(s) of Military surface vessels. 

As one can see, the procedures are straight forward and were designed for a specific task. The 
fact UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECTS are to be reported surprises some people, but it shouldn't 
really. Our Air Defense forces are constantly alert and they are ready to take immediate action. During 
my six and one half years as Project Officer, I received very few CIRVIS reports. I would say that 
twenty would be a good figure. I checked all of these reports thoroughly, and all of them turned out to 
be missile firings from Vandenburg AFB or surface vessel firings in the Pacific. Airline pilots 
sometimes express concern over the missile firings and their concern is valid. I have seen a number of 
reports where pilots have described erratic and momentary inoperation of their panel instruments. 
Fortunately, this is only momentary and occurs only for a few seconds. The CIRVIS report that stands 
out in my mind occurred a few years ago and was submitted to us by a Flying Tigers crew flying from 
Aickam, Hawaii to Travis AFB, California. The crew was two hours out of Travis at sunrise and they 
reported that to their right they could see a missile rising out of the Pacific Ocean. My first reaction 
was that a submarine was firing missiles in the Pacific so I called the operations officer at Point Magu, 
California. No one else had reported anything like a UFO over the Pacific, so I thought the submarine 
angle was it, but the OPS officer at Point Magu sure deflated my balloon in a hurry. He advised me 
that no submarine or surface vessels were firing in the Pacific. I told him that it had to be, because I'd 
just received a report and he cut me short, "sorry, Quint, it's not one of ours". I went to my map and 
plotted the course of the Flying Tigers Aircraft. I shook my head, told myself that it couldn't be. 
Vandenburg was over 1200 miles from the Aircraft's position, however, I decided to check it out just 
the same. I asked my secretary, Marilyn Stancombe, to get me the OPS Officer at Vandenburg. It was 
early in the morning so there was no problem getting through on the Watts line. I maintained good 
relations and rapport with all my contacts because without them the program was dead. I got the OPS 
Officer and he turned me over to the Range Officer. I told him about the report and immediately he 
told me that they had fired a missile at Sunrise that morning. I couldn't believe it and he couldn't 
believe it, but the direction of the sighting and the times fit perfectly. The atmospheric and weather 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



19 



conditions had been perfect for such a sighting. By the time I had finished checking all the details, the 
crew had already left Travis AFB, so I never did get to tell them exactly what they had observed. 

Another method of reporting UFO's is through MERINT. The format and procedures of 
MERINT are almost identical to CIRVIS. In fact, both MERINT and CIRVIS are part of JANAP 
146(D) whose title is CANADIAN-UNITED STATES COMMUNICATIONS INSTRUCTIONS FOR 
REPORTING VITAL INTELLIGENCE SIGHTS (CIRVIS/MERINT). This unclassified document 

was issued by the Joint Chief of Staff on February , 1959. During my tour of duty, I received only 

one MERINT report and it turned out to be the first stage of a missile which had been fired from 
Vandenburg and which had failed to sink. I decided to leave this problem with the Navy. I didn't want 
to usurp their prerogatives and besides I didn't have any surface vessels at my disposal for retrieval 
purposes. 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



THE AIR FORCE UFO PROGRAM 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



21 



I have often been asked by students and the Communications Media, how the Air Force 
collects, analyzes, evaluates, and disseminates information regarding UFO's. The techniques for doing 
all of these things are outlined in AFR 200-2, which was later changed to AFR 80-17. The change took 

place in , because it was felt that the UFO phenomena was no longer an 

intelligence problem, therefore, the reports should be handled through Research and Development 
channels. Not everyone agreed with this philosophy, but Bob Hippler, my energetic contact on the Air 
Staff, came through like a champ again. He staffed the revised regulation through the Pentagon with 
an "80 series" number and it was no problem for me to convince my superiors that this was the route 
to take. The "80 series" numbers are reserved for Research and Development regulations. The 
revisions were not many, but they were meaningful and clarified a few points which had been 
criticized by some of our detractors. Changing the regulation from the Intelligence Series to the 
Research and Development series didn't stop our critics, they just found something else to complain 
about. What the hell, the only way they could get their names in the newspapers was to chastise the 
Air Force. I asked these jokers again and again for a better plan than what the Air Force had and to this 
day I have not seen one that was worth a damn. The Air Force wasn't perfect, but we had an 
organization that functioned with precision. No UFO Hobby Club can make that statement. 

The general public doesn't realize to what extent the Air Force committed itself once it 
received a UFO report. It is true that our project office at Wright-Patterson AFB only had a 
complement of two officers, one sergeant, and one civilian stenographer. The initial investigation of 
all UFO sightings was therefore undertaken by the UFO investigating officer of the Air Force Base 
nearest the reported sighting. Air Force Regulation 200-2 and its successor 80-17 dictated that each 
Base Commander must appoint a UFO investigating officer. After the Base UFO officer conducted his 
initial investigation, he submitted his report to the project office at Wright-Patterson. Many sightings 
were explained at the Base level, however, many were not and the project office would immediately 
start its second phase of the investigation. We would either visit the witness personally, talk to the 
witness via telephone, or request further information through one of our standard UFO Questionnaires. 
AH UFO sightings fall into categories, the major ones being Astronomical Aircraft, Balloon, Satellites, 
and Other. The OTHER category has such causes as: hoaxes, hallucinations, unreliable reports, 
inversions, ground lights, clouds, contrails, chaff, birds, radar analysis, photo analysis, physical 
specimens, and satellite decay. The project office would proceed with its investigation according to the 
category of the sighting. Although our office complement was small, I had at my disposal professional 
experts from all scientific disciplines. Wright-Patterson has the best Materials Laboratory in the world 
and on at least ten different occasions they have analyzed, for the project office, physical specimens 
which were allegedly left behind by space travelers. Most of these turned out to be hoaxes and they 
were usually the most expensive sightings to investigate. On a number of occasions, I was crucified 
because I labeled certain sightings as hoaxes. I always believe in calling a spade a spade, but 
sometimes in my position this became extremely difficult. What most critics didn't realize at the time 
was that I had good evidence or good reason to label a sighting a hoax. Every sighting that I labeled a 



22 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



hoax turned out to be just that from the very beginning or was subsequently proven to have been 
perpetrated by an individual. There are cases still in Air Force files which I suspect are hoaxes, 
however, when evidence pointed in this direction I usually stopped the investigation in order to 
conserve my resources. I said usually, because on a few occasions I was compelled to continue the 
investigation because of political or news media pressure. 

The sightings which fell into one of the major categories were routinely checked. For routine 
astronomical sightings we consulted with Dr. J. Allen Hynek, Astrophysicist of the Dearborn 
Observatory. For suspected Meteor sightings we frequently consulted with Dr. Charles P. Olivier, who 
at one time before his retirement, was head of the American Meteor Society. For suspected aircraft 
sightings we contacted the Federal Aviation Agency offices, local airports, Headquarters Strategic Air 
Command, and Headquarters Air Defense Command. In suspected balloon sightings, we contacted 
local airports, local weather stations, the U.S. Weather Bureau, Holloman AFB Balloon Control 
Center, the National Center for Atmospheric Research, General Mills, Raven Industries, Sea Space 
Systems, and colleges and universities conducting balloon research. For satellite sightings we used the 
printed Echo schedules, NASA Satellite reports, the Smithsonian North and South Equatorial 
Crossing, and the professional services of the Space Detection Center. For suspected missile 
observations we went directly to Cape Kennedy, Vandenburg AFB, Point Magu, Wallops Island, Eglin 
AFB, Holloman AFB, and Green River. For radar analysis I have used the services of Mr. V.D. Bryant 
of the Foreign Technology Division. He has provided the project office with some excellent 
evaluations. For photo analysis I have used one of our internal organizations, however, on a few 
occasions we have used the Kodak Company in Rochester, N.Y.. For physical specimens we have 
called upon the Air Force Materials Laboratory, Battelle Memorial Institute, the Food and Drug 
Administration, Libby Owens, Corning Glass, The Institute of Paper Industry, and the Northwestern 
Geology Department. 

Numerous other individuals and organizations have helped the project office from time to 
time. Dr. Donald Menzel, who authored "The World of Flying Saucers" has helped me on some very 
ticklish cases. I consider Menzel to be a true scientist and not a publicity grabbing charlatan. Philip J. 
Klass, who wrote "UFO's-IDENTIFIED" offered the project office a number of UFO cases that turned 
out to be beauties. I consider Klass to be an excellent investigator. Neither one of these gentlemen has 
ever asked for one cent of payment and yet, these men have produced work of the highest caliber. It's 
also true that no government agency or industrial group ever refused me assistance whenever I needed 
it. 

As previously indicated, UFO sightings are classified according to the suspected real event 
that gave rise to each report. Some of the characteristics of these different categories are discussed in 
the following paragraphs. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



23 



UFO CATEGORIES 

CONVENTIONAL AIRCRAFT 

Regularly scheduled airliners fly in air corridors, and are controlled by the FAA. Lighting will 
be typically red and green wing lights with a rotating beacon. They use landing lights on take off as 
well and in the landing pattern. Sighting report may include the illusion of hovering or of a stationary 
period if the aircraft is in a turn or approaching the observer. Total duration should be consistent with 
flight maneuvers, not likely to exceed five minutes unless some series of maneuvers is being 
performed. Landing lights, blotting out the red and green flashing lights, is often reported as a single 
light at night. Experimental and unusual lighting effects can vary with the lighting configuration of 
each aircraft. Color most often reported as white can be red. Objects reported in straight flight at 
certain altitudes can be checked against local flight corridors. The FAA can also be checked if there 
remains doubt that an object is an aircraft or if positive identification of a specific flight is required. 
There may or may not be sound associated with the visual effect reported. 

Private or non-scheduled flights have the same characteristics in general. Speeds may be 
slower and duration a few minutes longer. Altitudes are usually lower. No sound is associated with the 
aircraft if the wind is blowing away from the observer. Duration should not exceed seven or eight 
minutes unless maneuvers are in progress. Normally flight is cleared from some local airport and not 
carried on radar through the FAA. This type of flight/aircraft is the most difficult to positively identify. 
Local airports are not noted for keeping excellent records on private aircraft. 

JET 

Airlines and high-altitude missions are similar to conventional flights in visual characteristics with the 
following exceptions: 

(1) The color is most often reported as red. (2) No sound is associated with the object. (3) 
Flight is usually straight or with one turn. (4) Duration is about three to five minutes. The 
FAA has designated air corridors for these flights. 

Special low -level military missions are flown at 2,000 feet in know air corridors. Sighting is 
usually brief, one minute or less. May be reported hovering if flight is directly toward the observer. 
May also include a sudden burst of speed. No sound associated with the aircraft if wind is blowing 
away from the observer. Aircraft is normally reported as a single light, however, more than one light 
has also been reported with this type of mission. Sightings of this type are almost exclusively reported 
at night. A few people have become emotionally upset and disturbed by this type of experience. 

Special tests or training missions, vary from a single plane to multiple flights or major air 
operations. These missions have from time to time given rise to UFO reports, however, these 
operations can be easily checked by contacting the local, regional, or Major Air Command controllers. 



24 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



A jet with after-burner in operation, viewed from the side, may give the appearance of a short 
flame. It is usually reported as blue and tapering. When the afterburner is cut off, the object may 
appear to have either just vanished or zoomed off into space. Duration is usually brief and the sighting 
is usually viewed during the climb. If viewed from the rear, the jet may be reported as red or orange 
with some yellow and of no distinct shape. Here again the disappearance may be sudden. If at high 
altitude, only a nondescript light may be reported. 

REFUELING MISSIONS 

Here lights on the tanker and the multiple aircraft engaged in the operation add new visual 
characteristics. Sightings are at night only; daylight operations would be easily recognized for what 
they are. They may be at low or high altitudes. Multiple lights will be moving around, in formation, 
going off and on. The basic light formation will fly straight for a set distance, then may make a 180 
degree turn. Duration in an area may seem as long as fifteen minutes, but any single pass should not 
last more than four or five minutes. Lights may be seen going one way and then appear on their return 
path later. 

Refueling operations are rigidly controlled and are conducted only in specified areas. A 
"Flight Planning Guide" issued by the Aeronautic Chart and Information Center gives the location of 
these areas and the agency controlling each. A phone call to the controller will determine whether the 
area was in use at a particular time and what Squadron flew the mission. A call to Squadron 
Operations will determine the number and type of aircraft flown plus the times of entry and exit from 
the controlled corridors. 

PHOTO AIRCRAFT 

Aircraft using flare drops for photo work are most often reported simply as flares. Similarly, 
aircraft using strobes to illuminate their target, which may work at either low or high altitudes, are 
reported as a series of evenly spaced flashes. Duration of these sightings is usually less than two 
minutes, more frequently thirty seconds. 

Infra-red photo planes have turbine generators to drive their equipment. These make a whining 
noise which can be heard above the noise of the aircraft engines. Not many agencies do this type of 
work, which is often classified. The planes used for this type of research are rather slow, less than 125 
mph. Much of this research is done early in the morning and the operations are normally conducted 
with full landing lights because of the low level altitudes which are normally flown. 

ADVERTISING AIRCRAFT 

Planes towing targets or banners during daylight hours are not usually misinterpreted unless 
they remain at such a distance that the observer cannot distinguish the vehicle and sign. Frequently in 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



25 



such cases the reports are accompanied by drawings picturing the towed banner as part of the UFO. 
Duration is longer than for other aircraft sightings, and the flight generally includes maneuvers. The 
frequently used loud speaker would not be heard unless the flight is close enough for correct 
identification. Local investigators can check for these aircraft, since the FAA regulations require a 
permit for such flights. 

HELICOPTERS 

The motion is slow and it may or may not appear to be hovering. It needs to be far enough 
from the observer to escape daylight identification. It has been reported as a black speck moving back 
and forth, up and down. During darkness, weird effects can be caused by the red rotating beacon light 
when it flashes off the canopy. Positive identification is usually simple to obtain by checking the flight 
schedules of military and civilian helicopters in the area. 

BALLOONS 

Flight characteristics in these cases are affected by meteorological factors. Wind temperature 
data is obtained from the Weather Bureau for any desired location throughout the U.S.. Lt. Col. Boyce 
Smith, the liaison Air Weather Service Officer at Wright-Patterson, obtained and evaluated all 
meteorological data for the project office. Low level weather balloons are described in sightings as 
round or oval, occasionally oblong. The flight may be reported as hovering, rising, zigzag, or erratic, 
but the object must be moving with the wind. It will be picked up by radar only if a radar reflector is 
attached. A frequent time for sightings is at dusk, before the balloon disappears into the earth's 
shadow. It is rarely sighted at night; its small white lights are not visible to ground observers from 
above 10,000 feet without optical aids. The sightings from planes is usually very brief, and on 
occasion experienced pilots have attributed unusual motion to balloons. 

An upper- air balloon may be described as round or oval, usually silver during the day and 
orange at dusk. It will appear stationary or in slow motion. Actually, it moves with prevailing winds at 
the altitude six months to the east and six months to the west. It will probably be picked up on radar 
and remain in the area long enough to be identified by aircraft scrambled or diverted for this purpose. 
Sudden disappearance is to be expected at dusk, and may be reported as zooming off into space. The 
sun's reflection through folded panels can give unusual flashing effects. Every effort is made to collect 
as many reports as possible; in this manner we have assisted the Scientific Community in recovering a 
number of these expensive balloons. 

Upper air research balloons are launched by the military and civilian agencies for cosmic ray 
and other studies. These are about 100 feet in diameter, usually of polyethylene. They can be 
programmed to fly at various altitudes between 80,000 and 125,000 feet or higher. Their appearance 
may vary according to the equipment which is suspended below the main body, however, it may also 
carry other attachments. This balloon is visible from the ground without optical aids and reports of 



26 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



their configuration do vary quite a bit. The speed will vary with the wind, from hovering in the same 
area for some hours to 200 mph in the jet stream. At night the balloon will descend as the gas cools 
and the next day go back up to the programmed altitude. It usually carries a radio beacon which is 
followed by tracking stations and pacer planes. It also carries running lights and radar reflectors. 
Occasionally, multiple balloons are used to carry heavy equipment. Pilots, scrambled to check on this 
kind of balloon, cannot reach its altitude, but can get close enough to identify it. At dawn the balloon 
may suddenly appear as it moves into the sunlight, and similarly may disappear at dusk. 

EARTH SATELLITES 

In order for a report to be evaluated as an artificial satellite, the following criteria must be met: 

(1) Time of the sighting must be at night and at such an hour that the vehicle can reflect the sun's rays. 

(2) Object should resemble a star in visual characteristics. (3) Direction of flight can have a westerly 
component only in the case of retrograde satellites. (4) Duration (considering the degrees of arc 
through which the object is observed) must be consistent with satellites orbital odocities. 

Satellites are normally reported as a star-like moving light most frequently white but 
occasionally yellow, green, blue, orange, and even red. Motion may be steady, hesitating, or zigzag; 
portions of the flight may be seen as hovering or stationary. The path may be reported as straight or 
arching, and a turn may be ascribed to it at the beginning or end of the flight. The object may appear or 
disappear suddenly. The speed should be about 15 degrees of arc per minute, the average duration is 
three to six minutes. There are over thirty artificial satellites in orbit which are visible to the naked 
eye. 

ASTRONOMICAL EVENTS 

The most common UFO reports were of astronomical observation, bright stars, planets, 
comets, fireballs, meteors, auroral streamers, and other celestial bodies. When observed through haze, 
light fog, moving clouds, or some other unusual conditions, the planets, especially Venus, Jupiter, and 
Mars, have been reported as UFO's. Stellar mirages are also a source of astronomical reports. 

OTHER CATEGORIES 

There are three other classifications used for UFO reports. An UNSUFFICIENT DATA 
category takes care of those reports in which essential elements of information are missing and 
therefore cannot properly be evaluated. Such information as duration, date, time, local sky position, 
weather conditions, appearance and disappearance was frequently missing in letter reports mailed 
directly to the project office. If there was any indication that such a sighting could be important from 
the viewpoint of security, scientific or technical value, or public interest, every attempt was made to 
obtain additional information necessary before placing the report in this category. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



27 



Another category was a catch-all labeled OTHER. It included missiles, reflections, mirages, 
search lights, birds, kites, spurious radar indications, hoaxes, fireworks, flares, photos, physical 
specimens, and satellite decays. 

And finally we arrive at the mysterious UNIDENTIFIED category. A sighting was considered 
UNIDENTIFIED when a report apparently contained all the data necessary to suggest a valid 
hypothesis, but its description could not be correlated with any known object or phenomenon. 



28 Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



UFO PUBLIC RELATIONS 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



29 



The operational aspect of the UFO program did not really present too much of a problem for 
the Air Force; however, our public relations were always like a yo-yo. I'm happy to say, that at the end 
they were always improving. 

Some place along the line, h the early fifties, the program got short-changed and it began to 
get bad press. I can understand why, too. Reporters like to interview, and when a project officer is not 
available, then they're going to write according to the way they imagine things are. This was the case 
in the early fifties. For some reason, and I can only surmise that it was because the UFO program was 
still in Intelligence Channels, UFO investigating officers were not available for interviews and were 
inaccessible. My predecessor, Lt. Col. Robert Friend, was interviewed a number of times; however, he 
was the first project officer to be personally interviewed by a reporter. When I became the project 
officer in July of 1963, a whole new slate of personnel was taking over in the Secretary of the Air 
Force Office of Information (SAFOI). All of us had the same idea — let's be open about the program, 
after all there was nothing to hide. My commander at the time was Brig. Gen. Arthur W. Peirce. 
General Peirce was concerned that reporters might iart taking interest in some of his intelligence 
activities; however, I assured him that UFO's would be the only topic discussed at my press 
interviews. 

From July 1963 to April 1964, there was very little publicity about the UFO program. I had 
just come cn board as project officer, so the UFO hobby clubs were not yet picking on the program 
again. Public relations were routine, such as answering letters and furnishing information to students 
for their science projects or term papers. Things were going so well, that I remember I stopped 
smoking that January. All hell broke loose on April 24, 1964, and I started smoking again. On that 
date at approximately 17:45 hours, at Socorro, New Mexico, police officer Lonnie Zamora was headed 
south chasing a speeding automobile when he suddenly heard a roar and saw a flame in the sky to the 
southwest. He decided to let the speeder go in favor of investigating the flame, because he knew there 
was a dynamite shack in the area and it might have blown up. He turned onto a gravel road that led by 
the shack. 

As he was driving slowly along the road, Zamora saw above a steep hill just ahead a funnel- 
shaped flame, bluish and sort of orange. The base of the flame was hidden behind the hill, there was 
no smoke connected with the flame. He had trouble getting the car to the top of the hill because of 
loose gravel; he had to try three times before he made it. As he reached the top of the hill, he saw a 
shiny object to the south, this side of the dynamite shack, about 150 to 200 yards away. It was off the 
road to the left in the arroyo, and at first glance it looked like a car turned over, but when he drove 
closer it appeared to be aluminum clay, not chrome, and oval-shaped like a football. Zamora drove 
about fifty feet along the hill crest, radioing back to the sheriff's office, "10-44 (accident), I'll be 10-6 
(busy out of the car), checking a wreck down in the arroyo". From this point, seated in the car, he 
could not see the object over the edge of the hill. As he stopped the car, he was still talking on the 
radio, and while he was getting out he dropped his mike. He picked it up and put it back and started 
down towards the object. 



30 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Just then he heard a very loud roar, not exactly like a blast, but also not steady like a jet 
engine. It was of low frequency at first and then became higher. At the same time he saw a light blue 
flame, sort of orange at the bottom. Zamora believed the flame came from the underside of the object; 
he could see no smoke but he did see some dust in the vicinity. He panicked, thinking the object was 
going to blow up. The following is his report of what he experienced (with slight rearrangements for 
the sake of clarity). 

As soon as I saw flame and heard roar... ran away from object but did turn head 
towards object. Object was in shape It was smooth — no windows or doors. As roar started, it 

was still on the ground. Noted red lettering of some type like . 

Insignia was about two and one half inches high and about two inches wide, I guess. Was in 

the middle of object, like . Object still like aluminum white. 

(Running), bumped leg on car back fender area. Car facing southwest... fell by can [sic] and 
(sun) glasses fell off, kept running to north, with car between me and object... rose to about 
level of car, about twenty to twenty-five feet, guess. Took I guess, about six seconds when 
object started to rise and I glanced back... it appeared about directly over the place where it 
rose from. 

I was still running... (then) about fifty feet from car. I ducked down, just over edge of 
hill... I stopped because I did not hear the roar. I was scared of the roar, and I had planned to 
continue running down the hill. I turned around toward the object and at the same time put my 
head toward ground, covering my face with my arms... when the roar stopped, heard a sharp 
tone whine and the whine lasted maybe a second. Then there was complete silence about the 
object. 

That's when I lifted up my head and saw the object going away from me... in a 
southwestern direction... It did not come any closer to me. It appeared to go in straight line and 
at same height — possibly ten to fifteen feet from ground, and it cleared the dynamite shack by 
about three feet. Shack about eight feet high. Object was traveling west fast. It seemed to rise 
up and take off immediately across country. 

I ran back to my car and as I ran back, I kept an eye on the object. I picked up my 
...sunglasses, got into the car, and radioed to Nep Lopes, radio operator, to look out the 
window to see if he could see an object. He asked, "What is it?" I answered, "It looks like a 
balloon". I don't know if he saw it. If Nep looked out his window, which faces north, he 
couldn't see it. I did not tell him at the moment which window to look out of. 

As I was calling Nep, I could still see object. The object seemed to lift up slowly, and 
to get small in the distance very fast. It seemed to just clear the Box Canyon or Mile Canyon 
Mountain. It disappeared as it went over the mountain. It had no flame whatsoever as it was 
traveling over the ground, and no smoke or noise. 

Feeling in good health. Las drink — two or three beers over a month ago. Noted no 
odors. Noted no sounds other than described. Gave direction to Nep Lopes at radio and to 
Sergeant Chaves (of New Mexico State Police a Socorro) to get there. Went down to where 
the object had been, and I noted the brush was burning in several places. — I got my pen and 
drew a picture of the insignia on the object. 

Then Sgt. Chaves came up, asked me what the trouble was because I was sweating 
and he told me that I was white, very pale. I asked the Sgt. To see what I saw and that was the 
burning brush. Then Sgt. Chaves and I went down to the spot and Sgt. Chaves pointed out the 
tracks. 

When I first saw the object (when I thought it might be a car) I saw what appeared to 
be two legs of some type from the object to the ground. At the time, I didn't pay much 
attention to... the two legs. The two legs were at the bottom of the object, slanted outwards to 
the ground. The object might have been about three and a half feet from the ground at the 
time. . . 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



31 



Lonnie Zamora experienced an event which left quite an impression on him. He was a serious 
officer, a pillar of his church, and a man well versed in recognizing airborne vehicles in his area. He 
was puzzled by what he saw, and frankly, so am I. And yet, I've always had some doubt about this 
case, even though it is the best documented case on record. In spite of the fact that I conducted the 
most thorough investigation that was humanly possible, the vehicle or stimulus that scared Zamora to 
the point of panic has never been found. 

During the course of the investigation and immediately thereafter, everything that was 
possible to verify was checked. The communications media must have been waiting for a case like 
this, because immediately after Zamora reported his sighting all hell broke loose. The telephone at my 
house was ringing off the hook. I went to my office so that I could direct the investigation from there 
and at the same time contact Kirtland, Holloman, and White Sands via our telephone communications 
system. As I walked into our building, and turned into the hallway towards my office, I could hear the 
telephone ringing, ringing, ringing. The operator informed me that I had ten or twelve calls waiting for 
me. I decided not to accept the calls until after I had talked with my UFO investigating officer at 
Kirtland. Major Connor was my primary investigator at Kirtland, but he was inexperienced. 
Fortunately, my chief analyst, Sgt. David Moody was on temporary duty at Kirtland. I asked Major 
Connor to get in touch with him and for Moody to get in touch with me regardless of the hour. It was 
hours before the investigation could be organized and on its way. A Geiger counter had to be found 
and the base photographer had to be called. The staff car, which had been provided for the 
investigation had a flat tire midway between Albuquerque and Socorro. Socorro is located fifty-five 
miles south of Kirtland Air Force Base. 

The Stallion Range Officer had already conducted a preliminary investigation and had also 
interviewed Zamora. This information was turned over to the Air Force investigators as soon as they 
began their interview with Zamora. Connor and Moody kept in touch with me and provided me with 
good information, but there was nothing from which we could draw a definite conclusion or a decent 
evaluation. The news media was on SAFOFs back and SAFOI was on my back. I didn't have any idea 
as to what Zamora saw and reported, but by God, I was going to find it. Because of the pressure from 
the news media, I decided to send Dr. J. Allen Hynek, Project Blue Book consultant, to Kirtland to 
help with the investigation. I felt that Hynek could concentrate on Socorro while Connor and Moody 
could check all other activity at the other bases in New Mexico. In the meantime, Marilyn Beumer 
Stancombe, my secretary, and I began checking for some sort of positive activity. Radiation had been 
checked by Connor and Moody and the readings were negative. I checked the Holloman AFB Balloon 
Control Center for balloon activity. All local weather stations and Air Force bases in New Mexico 
were checked for release of weather balloons. Helicopter activity was checked throughout the state. 
Government and private aircraft were checked. The econnaissance division in the Pentagon was 
checked. I checked with the immigration division hoping they might help. Finally, I was at my wits 
end, so I told Marilyn, "Get me the White House Command Post". She looked at me with those 
beautiful blue eyes of hers like I was nuts. I said, "Yes, Marilyn, the White House Command Post". 
She never asked me a question, she just started dialing. I was afraid she would ask me how she could 
reach them, but she didn't. It took her five or six calls, but she got me the Command Post. A Major 



32 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



General answered and I explained to him my situation. He was very sympathetic, but off hand he 
couldn't recall any type of activity in my area of interest. However, he'd check and call me back. 
Fifteen minutes later the General called back and told me that the only activity which he had was some 
U-2 flights. That was no help, so I thanked him for his cooperation and put my thinking cap on again. 
It took days for us to check all of these agencies and activities. I finally received Dr. Hynek's report; it 
was one of his typical reports which contained few technical details and added practically nothing to 
what had already been submitted by Connor and Moody. Actually, Hynek added very little to the 
investigation, however, his typical press hterviews added more flame to the fire. The more press 
coverage the sightings got, the greater the number of sightings which were reported throughout New 
Mexico. 

I was determined to solve the case and come hell or high water I was going to find the vehicle 
or the stimulus. I decided that it was imperative for me to talk to the Base Commander at Holloman 
AFB. I wanted to interview the Base Commander at length about special activities from his base. I 
needed help to pull this off, so I called Lt. Col. Maston Jacks at SAFOI. I told him what I wanted to do 
and he asked, "Do you think it will do any good?" I replied, "God damned it Maston, if there is an 
answer to this case it has to be in some hanger at Holloman". He went to work from his position at the 
Pentagon and the approval for my visit came through. Colonel Garman was the Base Commander 
during my visit. He was most cooperative and told me that I could go anywhere and visit any activity 
which interested me. I went from one end of the base to the other. I spent four days talking to 
everybody I could and spent almost a whole day with the down-range controllers at the White Sands 
Missile Range. I left Holloman dejected and convinced that the answer to Zamora's experience did not 
originate and terminate at that base. 

On my way back to Wright-Patterson, I hit upon an idea. Why not a lunar landing vehicle? I 
knew that some research had been done at Wright-Patterson; so as soon as I got back I asked for some 
briefings. The briefings were extremely informative, but the Lunar Landers were not operational in 
April 1964. I got the names of the companies that were doing research in this field and I started 
writing letters. The companies were most cooperative, but their answers were all negative. 

It was now time for me to pass judgment on the case after a careful review of all the 
information at hand. I hate to use the word "judgment", but that is exactly what it boils down to. As 
President Truman used to say, "The buck stops here", and in the world of UFO's my desk was the end 
of the line. It was time for the Air Force to make a formal decision on the sighting of Socorro, New 
Mexico. I reviewed the Air Force Materials Laboratory Analysis of the soil samples which were 
gathered at the alleged landing area. Conclusion: no foreign residue. Laboratory analysis of the burned 
brush revealed no chemicals that could have been propellant residue. Radiation was normal for the 
alleged landing area and for the surrounding area. There was no unusual meteorological activity, no 
thunderstorms; the weather was windy, but clear. Although we made an extensive search for other 
witnesses, none could be located. There were no unidentified helicopters or aircraft in the area. Radar 
installations at Holloman AFB and at Albuquerque observed no unusual blips, but the down-range 
Holloman MTI (Moving Target Indicator) Radar, closest to Socorro, had been closed down for the day 
at 1600 hours. All the findings and conclusions were negative. The object was traveling at 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



33 



approximately 120 miles per hour when it disappeared over the mountains according to Zamora's best 
estimate. I labeled the case "Unidentified" and the UFO buffs and hobby clubs had themselves a field 
day. According to them, here was proof that our beloved planet had been visited by an extraterrestrial 
vehicle. Although I labeled the case "Unidentified" I've never been satisfied with that classification. 
I've always felt that too many essential elements of the case were missing. These are the intangible 
elements which are impossible to check, so the solution to this case could very well be lying dormant 
in Lonnie Zamora's head. 

SAFOI and I had been most fair with the communications media. We gave them everything 
we had on the case. We even let the reporters review the official file for themselves, but we still took 
our lumps from some of them. Reporters are a unique breed. They are impatient, offensive, and they 
don't like to read voluminous reports. Time and time again I offered them the official reports, only to 
have them ask for my opinion and what I thought of the incident. I had good rapport with most of the 
reporters, but three or four of them were real stinkers. It's not really a bad percentage if you take into 
account the total number of reporters that I dealt with. 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



THE MAKING OF A UFO INVESTIGATING OFFICER 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



35 



I've often been asked, "How did you get involved with flying saucers?" My answer has 
always been short and simple. I was appointed to the position by my superior officer. It's important 
that I give you some of my background. It's important to me because I think there might be a message 
for some Mexican kid who is about ready to drop out of school or our society. The easiest thing in the 
world to do is drop-out. The most difficult thing to do is to drop-in and challenge the system lawfully. 
This country of ours offers us many opportunities and we must be ready intellectually and physically 
to accept the challenge and to excel. My life had its beginning in Monterrey, Mexico. I was born in a 
neighborhood which is now considered the ghetto. My parents, my three brothers, and I immigrated to 
the United States when I was six years old. I remember walking across the old bridge at Laredo, 
Texas, and I wanted to urinate very badly. Mama wouldn't let me urinate in the old Rio Grande River, 
so I had to wait until we reached the immigration office. I remember my parents being afraid of the 
customs officers. I guess all immigrants have this feeling and some of it is unjustified and some of it is 
justified. My first impression of Laredo, Texas, was one of disappointment. Someone along the way 
had lied to me. The streets in the United States were not paved with gold. In fact, many of the streets 
were not paved at all. We settled in San Antonio, Texas, and our first house in the United States was a 
humble one. We rented a house in the vicinity of Martin and Laredo streets. The house was small and 
we had an old cast iron stove for cooking. We also had a dirt floor, but it didn't bother us kids too 
much because we only wore shoes on Sunday. There was an elementary school two blocks from our 
house and I was immediately registered to attend that school. The enrollment was predominately 
Mexican and they had a language of their own which they called "Tex-Mex". I was in a hell of a 
pickle, because I spoke Castilian Spanish and no English. There were a few Angolos around the 
school, but they were definitely in the minority. Needless to say, I didn't get along with either group. 
The Mexicans didn't like us because we were fair skinned, talked funny, and considered uppity. The 
Angolos didn't like us because we were Mexicans; consequently I remember fighting practically every 
day of my life, but my brothers and I survived. We stuck together and always came to each others aid. 
In fact, we're still that close and manage to help each other when the need arises. 

We moved around a few times and we always lived on the fringe of the "West Side". In San 
Antonio, the "West Side" is that section of the city which is reserved for the underprivileged, the 
illiterates, the dope addicts, the gangs, the bars with whores, and everything else that preys on poverty. 
If you live in the West Side of San Antonio and survive its environment, then my countryman, you 
deserve a medal. I started peddling papers at the age of seven. My turf was the Baptist Memorial 
Hospital. It was a good location and I used to have to fight guys every day to keep them from 
infringing on my territory. The depression hit hard and not too many people were willing to part with 
two cents for a paper; so I started carrying a shoe shine box. I'd shine shoes for anything; whatever the 
traffic would bear. The doctors at the hospital were kind and I've often remembered them. The 
gentlemen I remember most is Franklin D. Jones, who was the hospital auditor during my formative 
years. In fact, I've always considered Mr. Jones my "guardian angel". I've never told him so, but I've 
always felt that he was instrumental in forming my personal attitude towards life. Here was an Angolo 



36 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



who took an interest in our life; who offered us love, compassion, guidance, and even visited our 
$1.25 a week shack. He arranged to have my tonsils removed when I was constantly sick with 
tonsillitis. He bought me my first suit when I graduated from Hawthorne Junior High School. He 
taught me how to keep books on my newspaper accounts, so that I could pay my bills. He taught me 
compassion for my fellow men and above all he set an example for me which has been difficult to 
follow. 

Even though I was peddling papers, my parents always made me go to school. I guess I never 
thought about dropping out, but it got a little bit tougher the older I got. During my Junior High School 
years, I had a paper route on Dewey Street right next to where San Antonio College is now located. I 
used to get my papers at the Sinclair Station located at Dewey and McCoullough. The station was 
managed by J.C. Glass and he used to leave the latrine door open in the winter time so that I could 
keep warm while I was blocking my papers. My paper route was a morning and afternoon route; so 
that meant that I had to get up at four-thirty every morning in order to get to school on time. The 
afternoon route was a breeze compared to the early morning ordeal. Poor Mama, so many times she 
heard my alarm and no effort from me to rise. She would come over to my bed and say, "Hijo, es 
tiempo que te vallas", which in English means, "Son, it's time for you to go". During my high school 
years, I changed companies. The San Antonio Light had only afternoon deliveries, so I went with 
them. I stayed with them until my first month at St. Mary's University. I had a Physics and 
Mechanical Drawing Lab twice a week and my customers were beginning to complain about my late 
deliveries. They had a right to complain and I recognized this and talked it over with my manager, Mr. 
S.G. Rees. We agreed that I should leave and then he helped me get a part time job at the Post Office. I 
worked part time at the Post Office until I got my draft notice. I was sorting mail on night in January, 
1943, when one of the city sorters tapped me on the shoulder. He said, "I think this belongs to you", 
and sure enough it did. I asked Mr. Nelms if I could have permission to take it home and he said OK. I 
was very happy and proud to be able to go into the Army because the thing I wanted most to be was a 
navigator. I was good at math and I knew I could hack it. I had one draw back and that was that in 
order to be an officer in the Army Air Corps you had to be an American Citizen. I was an immigrant 
and up to that time, too young to apply for citizenship. I was drafted into the Army Air Corps and sent 
to Radio Tech School in Wisconsin and Radar Tech School at Boca Raton, Florida. While at Boca 
Raton I worked on my naturalization papers, but I received my overseas assignment before I could 
take the oath. I was assigned to the 72 nd Bomb Squadron, 13 th Air Force in March 1944. We moved all 
over the South Pacific and in March 1945, we landed in Samar, Republic of the Philippines. I was still 
trying to get my citizenship papers, but I always managed to miss the authorities who could administer 
the oath. My Commander called me in one day and told me that one of our planes was going to 
Manila. The plane would be gone for three days. The Ambassador in Manila could administer the 
oath. I hitch-hiked on an Army truck from the Air Base all the way to Manila. I went to the American 
Embassy and I told the lady why I was there and she very slowly and solemnly shook her head and 
told me that the Ambassador. .. [LOST LAST SENTENCE]... night I got very depressed and 
despondent and ended up in a little dive across the street from the Manila Stadium. I made friends with 
another soldier who was on pass and we both proceeded to get bombed. The whiskey was crude, 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



37 



green, and bad. I still remember the name of the whiskey which we were drinking, it was "Purple 
Heart", and I think I deserve one for drinking it. My friend and I managed to get back to our tents and 
I had the good fortune of vomiting before I hit my sack. I slept fully clothed and even had my flight 
cap on when I awoke the next morning. That was my first drunk and I've never forgotten it. 

The war came to an end just as we were getting ready to deploy elsewhere. Rumor had it that 
we were going to Okinawa and wait for the invasion of Japan. I was scheduled to go with the advance 
unit, but instead ended up cooling my heels waiting for transportation to take me home. I came back 
on an old liberty ship and spent eighteen days in the bottom hold which smelled of human bodies 
which were placed too close together. Showers were a luxury and the water was rationed. I got back to 
the States in good shape and my experience on the liberty ship was just another chapter in my book of 
life. 

I was discharged from the Army Air Corps on December 16, 1945. I was discharged at Fort 
Bliss, Texas, and immediately headed for home. I enrolled at Saint Mary's University at mid-term in 
January, 1946. 

On October 25, 1946, 1 was administered the naturalization oath in the Federal Building in San 
Antonio, Texas and thereby became a full-fledged United States citizen. It meant a lot to me then and 
it still does. 

I picked up my educational pieces and decided on a physics degree. I received my degree in 
1950, however, this was the era of the Korean conflict and the business world was uncertain and 
unstable, so I got a job and waited. As a newspaper and shoe -shine boy around San Antonio, I 
remember vividly dreaming of being an officer in the United States Army. I used to see these young 
officers in their "Pinks and Greens" and I'd say to myself that one day I would be one of them. In 
April of 1951, after having passed all the requirements, the Air Force offered me a direct Commission 
as a Second Lieutenant and I accepted. And another dream had come true. 

In August, 1951, I was called to Active Duty and assigned to the USAF Security Service. I 
spent nine years with Security Service as an intelligence officer. I served two tours of duty with the 
headquarters in San Antonio and a tour each in Germany and Japan. My next four years were spent at 
Rome Air Development Center as a Systems Project Officer. 

In April 1963, I was informed of a new assignment at Wright-Patterson. Nobody mentioned 
UFO's and probably nobody knew at the time, that I was to become the new and the last Project Blue 
Book Officer. I arrived at Wright- Patterson during the latter part of July, 1963. My sponsor was Lt. 
Col. Robert Friend, chief of Project Blue Book from 1959 to July, 1963. Bob Friend had done a 
tremendous job with the UFO program, but very few people knew it. He did his job, did it well, and 
stayed in the background. Bob took me around the Base, showed me where all the essential buildings 
were located, and then introduced me to all his contacts. In this business, contacts are essential in order 
to get the job done in the minimum time. When the formality of processing was all over, I was 
introduced to the man who in some ways changed my life and in a way also changed the destiny of the 
UFO's. This gentleman was a man who stood six foot, three inches tall, walked straight as an arrow, 
had a commanding voice, was a West Point graduate, a native of California, Persona non Grata in 
some circles, and a full Colonel who went by the name of Eric T. de Jonckheere. 



38 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Colonel de Jonckheere wasted no time in telling me that he had selected me to be the next 
UFO officer, he had reviewed my record and considered me qualified to handle the job. He needed an 
officer with a Physics degree, with maturity, tact, a diplomat, drive, and one who could stay cool under 
fire. I shook my head — hell, he couldn't be talking about me. I had a Physics degree and I was mature, 
but the rest of the stuff was not part of my make-up. He asked me to try it for a couple of weeks and 
then come back and give him a briefing. Bob Friend briefed me on the program and I occupied myself 
daily by doing background reading and researching. On August 5, 1963, we got a call from the 
newspaper office in Fairfield, Illinois. The Wayne County Press was having a field day. The first 
paragraph of the Wayne County Press dated August 5, 1963 read as follows: 

An 18 year old boy was chased home Sunday night by a flying saucer or some other unknown 
heavenly body. The whole neighborhood out this way is talking about it. 

MY FIRST UFO CASE 

This report triggered other reports; so Bob said that I could cut my teeth on this one. I'll have 
to admit that I was apprehensive and probably scared, so I was most happy that Bob was heading the 
team. The other member of the team was Sgt. Charles R. Sharp, who would be our photographer. We 
left for Fairfield immediately and arrived at our destination late at night. The following morning we 
visited the Sheriffs office and he briefed us on what had transpired. The sheriff wasn't excited at all 
and he wasn't the least bit concerned at what had happened. We went to the newspaper office and they 
gave us names of some additional witnesses. First off, we contacted the young man who had 
experienced the frightening event. The newspaper reporters had been interviewing him so much that 
his mother at first refused to let us talk to him. The young man's grandfather interceded for us and 
then we were able to proceed with the investigation. We started at the beginning where he first 
experienced the event, on the road from the drive-in movie. We measured angles, distances, times, etc. 
We went over the same route and reconstructed the event as closely as possible. I was taking most of 
the notes and Bob was asking most of the questions. We had a star chart with us and the clincher came 
when the young man told us that he and some friends had stayed up until four o'clock watching the 
saucer. The saucer disappeared all of a sudden at day break. In order to complete the investigation we 
had to talk to the young man's girl friend. She had been in the car with him as they were driving back 
from the drive-in movie. The young lady was bothered by a toothache and she wouldn't sit adjacent to 
the driver. She was in no mood to be cordial and this possibility bothered the driver to no end. She 
wasn't excited about her boy friend's experience. Two days after her boy friend had experienced the 
event, her toothache was gone and she didn't know what all the excitement was about. Before we left 
Fairfield, we had concluded that the flying saucer chasing the young man was really the planet Jupiter. 
We had two other sightings to check while we were in Fairfield. We determined that the second 
sighting was a meteor. We had other witnesses to verify our conclusions. The other sighting was an air 
to air refueling operation which we verified as soon as we returned to Wright-Patterson. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



39 



As soon as we returned to Wright-Patterson, Colonel de Jonckheere asked for a full report. 
Bob told me to write it up because I'd have to brief the "ole man". I briefed Colonel de Jonckheere and 
gave him a full account of what had transpired, our conclusions, etc. He nodded his head in 
satisfaction and said, "you're my new UFO officer". At that time I didn't think I was ready for the 
responsibility and I told him so. Colonel de Jonckheere looked me straight in the eye and said, "You 
take this job and do it well or I'll bust your ass". And that, ladies and gentlemen, is how I became a 
UFO investigating officer. 

I'm really very grateful for the opportunity which was handed to me, because only in America 
could an immigrant Mexican rise to head such an important and controversial project. I learned 
quickly and matured rapidly. I had to, our critics were many and our friends were few. 

THE PRESS 

Much has been written about the biases and prejudices of the fourth estate and I'll admit that 
many times this is true. At one time in my young life, I had accepted the fourth estate as the infallible 
creature who was constantly in pursuit of the gospel truth. I've changed my mind and now the first 
question I ask is "who wrote it?", and I'll go on from there. I've had good rapport with the press as a 
whole, but three or four of them were a real pain in the ass. 

The responsibility for dealing with the Press Corps was vested in the Secretary of the Air 
Force office of Information (SAFOI). It had been their responsibility since the early fifties and they 
kept it till the very end. SAFOI gathered all the UFO information and they in turn presented this 
information to the press via periodic news releases. A typical news release on UFO's in the late fifties 
is as follows: 

[INSERT NEWS RELEASE] 

This type of news release satisfies very few people and it certainly does not satisfy an 
inquisitive reporter. The policy at SAFOI in the mid-fifties had been to keep the UFO project office 
away from reporters and that all UFO data would be released from one central office. The periodic 
news releases didn't satisfy the communications media and they had themselves a field day. Time after 
time, the media raked the Air Force because they felt that they were getting meager information. The 
UFO buffs and the hobby clubs were always available, so they were getting the good press while the 
Air Force was taking its lumps. The UFO promoters were at their peak during this period and they 
were selling their garbage at premium prices. The press kept UFO's on the front pages and the public 
actually believed that the Air force knew of the reality of flying saucers, but wouldn't tell what they 
knew. The hobby clubs were promoting this philosophy and they were successful in selling it in some 
high offices of our legislative branch. If you can get Congress to investigate something, you can keep 
it on the front pages for a few days. The correspondence between Congress and SAFOI was very 
heavy during the late fifties and the early sixties. Our detractors were many and somehow they always 
managed to get a favorable press and at the same time the Air Force was made to look like the bad guy 



40 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



who was inadequate and at the same time was deliberately deceiving the American public. Our intent 
was just the opposite, we wanted to inform the public of significant events which would be of national 
interest and at the same time honor all queries from the press. 

In early July, 1964, Maston Jacks from SAFOI called to tell rre that Emil Sveilis from UPI 
wanted a personal interview with me and asked me to be available. I sent a memo to this effect to the 
Colonel and he didn't like it, but he also knew that he couldn't buck SAOFI. In a show down, SAFOI 
always comes out on top. B/G Arthur J. Pierce was the FID Commander at the time and he didn't like 
the reporters coming into his classified building, but he didn't object too strongly this particular time. 
In a way, it was sort of unfortunate that my office was located in the Headquarters Building; because 
while most of the FTD's activities are classified, my job was not. Access to the building is rigidly 
controlled, therefore, it's not easy for an outsider to gain entrance unless he has the proper credentials. 
SAFOI supplied the proper credentials for Mr. Sveilis and he had no problem getting into the building 
and into my office. Mr. Sveilis conducted his interview in my office and I gave him all the data which 
he requested. Frankly, even though I had boned up for the interview, I was sweating little green 
apples. I had never had a personal interview with a reporter before. Sveilis was tough, but he could 
have been a lot tougher and I guess what saved me in that first interview was the fact that I was 
perfectly honest and candid with my answers. His story was straight forward and wasn't bad at all. It 
was a change from some of the stories which had been written about the project. Mr. Sveilis' visit also 
opened up the door for other reporters to visit the project office. I kept a list of media reporters who 
visited the office from time to time. The following is a list of individuals who have visited the Project 
Blue Book office at Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, from 1964 to the present. The individuals, who 
visited the project office were granted personal interviews by the project officer and also had access to 
all Air Force UFO reports. 



Name 


Date 


Duration 


Emil Sveilis, UPI 


Jul 64 


two days 


Tom Olsen, UFO Retrieval Center, Inc. 


Aug 64 


three days 


Hewes, IIOUPO 


Sep 64 


one day 


Jacque Vallee 


Mar 65 


two days 


Richard Lippincott, Scripp Howard 


Aug 65 


one day 


Al Goldberg, Associated Press 


Sep 65 


one day 


Bud Ledwyth, WXBP, Sidney, Ohio 


Sep 65 


one day 


Seymour Hothman, Toledo Blade 


14 Sep 65 


one day 


Bulkley Griffin 


Oct 65 


two days 


Herbert Shuldiner, Popular Science 


22 Oct 65 


one day 


Bill Wise & Stanley Wayman, Life Mag. 


23 Mar 66 


one day 


CBS Reports, Joseph Wershbra & 5 personnel 


14 Apr 66 


one day 


Mort Young, New York Journal American 


21 Apr 66 


one day 


James Trunnel, Courier Journal, Louisville, KY 


1 8 May 66 


one day 


Carol Clapp, Record Courier, Ravenna, Ohio 


27 May 66 


one day 


Lloyd Mallan, Davis Publications 


8 Jun 66 


three days 


Fred Myers, National Council of Churches 


Jul 66 


one day 


John Weigle, News Chronicle, California 


8 Aug 66 


one day 


Livio Caputa of Epoca Magazine, Italy 


2 & 7 Aug 66 


two days 


Dr. J.E. McDonald, U. of Arizona (3 visits) 


Jun & Jul 66 


nine days 


Barry Trader, KOA TV, Denver 


5 Jan 67 


one day 


Richard Platte, USAE, Joint Operations Gp. 


24 Jan 67 


one day 


Ted Bloecher (Member of NICAP) 


4 Feb 67 


one day 


Roger Peterson, ABC News 


15 Feb 67 


one day 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



41 



Alton Blakesly, Associated Press 


16 Feb 67 


one day 


Ron Hite, Herald Dispatch, Huntington, W. VA 


1 Mar 67 


one day 


Jack Jones, Dayton Daily News 


6 Mar 67 


one day 


Lloyd Mallan, Davis Publications 


31 May 67 


three days 


Mr. Roantgen, German TV Correspondent 


7 Jul 67 


two days 


Mr. Clark, Miami Herald, Oxford, Ohio 


13 Sep 67 


one day 


Dr. Robert M. Wood, McDonnell-Douglas Corp. 


29 May 68 


two hours 


Mr. W.S. Elwood, WGVE-FM, School of Gary, IN 


19 Jun 68 


one hour 


Mr. Walter Sullivan, New York Times 


28 Jun 68 


one day 


Mr. Herb Strentz, Northwestern University 


17-18 Jul 68 


two days 


James Finnegan (High School student) N.Y. 


12-1 3 Aug 68 


two days 


Dr. Robert Nathan, Computer Science, 






Nathan Computer, Pasadena, CA 


22 Oct 68 


two hours 


Christy Lehman (Wittenburg Univ., student) 


30 Oct 68 


two hours 


Lloyd Mallan, Fawcett Publications 


18-22 Nov 68 


four days 


Mr. William Service, WJRT-TV, Flint, Ml 


13 Feb 69 


one day 



The following is a list of personal interviews granted to the news media at their place of business. 
These individuals did not request access to the UFO files. 



Name 



Date 



Duration 



Greg Wallace, ABC Reports 

Phil Donahue, WHIO Radio, Dayton 

Richmond Virginia Press Club 

Scott Craig, NBC Documentary on UFOs 

Phil Donahue, WHIO Radio, Dayton 

American Society of Newspaper Editors, 

Washington, D.C. 



1965 
1965 
Feb 65 
June 65 
29 Mar 66 

22 Apr 67 



one day 
one day 
one day 
one day 
one day 

one day 



As can be seen from the preceding list, we weren't trying to keep anybody out. However, we 
were trying to keep traffic to a reasonable size so that we could proceed with our normal daily work 
Our image of a secret little office changed proportionally with the number of reporters who visited the 
project office. In 1966, our critics changed their tactics, and in order to grab a few headlines started 
accusing the Air Force of incompetence. 

The main critic which the Air Force had was the National Investigations Committee on Aerial 
Phenomena (NICAP). They claimed they had over 10,000 dues paying members. For a monthly fee 
each member was entitled to receive a monthly bulletin which gave a distorted account of what was 
happening in the World of Flying Saucers. This bulletin was widely distributed, and also frequently 
quoted by members of the Free Lance Writing Profession. The NICAP headquarters is located on 
Connecticut Avenue in Washington, D.C, but it is in no way sponsored or funded by any agency of 
the United States government. Neither does it have any official government connections or 
responsibilities. Besides printing its monthly bulletin, NICAP also sold books dealing with flying 
saucers; and was a natural outlet for books written by its director, Donald E. Keyhoe, Major, USMC 
(Ret.). Keyhoe has written at least three flying saucer books that I know of, and the NICAP bulletins 
gave him many columns of free publicity. 

NICAP, on two occasions, was the main instigator for Congressional Investigations of the 
UFO project, but the results were not to their liking. In fact, all the ridicule and venom which their 



42 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



bulletin heaped on the Air Force only made us strive harder to overcome our deficiencies. In the end, 
we managed to survive all their criticisms and perform a credible service to the American public. The 
power of the press is tremendous, but in the end, truth does prevail. I might add that NICAP writers 
were masters at presenting meager and unverified data as fact. This is what sold their bulletins and 
procured new members for their pseudo- scientific organization. 

Another organization with a wide following, and international in scope, was the Aerial 
Phenomena Research Organization (APRO), which has its headquarters in Alamogordo, New Mexico. 
APRO also had a bulletin which was widely distributed and was published professionally on good 
quality paper. APRO was not an outspoken critic of the USAF UFO program, although at times they 
did criticize our methods of operation. Their bulletin deals mostly with reporting UFO incidents which 
have been reported to their international headquarters. Coral E. Lorenzen is the director and she has 
written a couple of books on flying saucers. APRO has done its share in keeping the interest of flying 
saucers before the public. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



CONGRESS AND THE UFO S 



44 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



The Congress of the United States has always been interested in the USAF UFO program. A 
few members of Congress have managed to grab some spectacular UFO headlines, however, most of 
these publicity hunting opportunities have either been defeated for re-election or have fallen by the 
wayside. Many private UFO clubs were formed in the early 1950' s. In the beginning the objective in 
most cases was sincere, however, as time passed the attitudes changed and then their principal pastime 
and objective was to accuse the Air Force of misleading the public. Most of these clubs professed to 
study the UFO problem scientifically, but none were competently manned to do so. They were 
continually bombarding members of Congress with critical letters and those letters in turn were 
submitted to the Pentagon for necessary action. These hobby clubs have frequently accused the USAF 
of having a higher office in the Pentagon making all the decisions for Project Blue Book. My office 
was supposed to be the book keeping extension of that office and I was only the record keeper. The 
truth of the matter is that SAFOI handled National Public Relations and I handled all operational 
aspects of the program. AFRDDG monitored the Air Force Program for the Air Staff from 1966 until 
it was cancelled, and CAR monitored Dr. E.U. Condon's Colorado Project. In all matters dealing with 
UFO's the buck stopped at Wright-Patterson, consequently all congressional referrals eventually were 
coordinated by me or my assistant. Letters to members of Congress increased in 1958 and Senator 
McClellan's sub-committee requested a formal presentation of all aspects dealing with the UFO 
Program. The briefing was given to the sub-committee on January 31, 1958, and the members seemed 
satisfied. Politics again plagued the program later on in the year when Senator McCormack's sub- 
committee requested an up-dated briefing. A full scale briefing was given to the sub-committee and 
again satisfaction was expressed by the members. The hobby clubs were clamoring for an open- 
hearing in Congress and this was the reason for all the sub-committee briefings. They needed the 
exposure and they were applying pressure at the top. Which sub-committee had jurisdiction over 
Project Blue Book in case of an open-hearing? Was an open-hearing warranted? The hobby clubs 
convinced some members of Congress that an open-hearing was essential, but the sub-committee as a 
group were not buying this approach. In 1961, the National Investigations Committee on Aerial 
Phenomena (NICAP), a privately supported organization, opened a concerted drive to get Congress to 
hold an open-hearing. NICAP claimed to have the largest UFO membership and at one time I would 
judge that most of the members spent all of their time writing letters. During my career I received 
hundreds of letters from their members and Congress received thousands. Because of NICAP' s efforts 
to get an open-hearing, the Honorable Joseph E. Karth, a member of the Committee On Science and 
Astronautics, decided to conduct an investigation for the full Committee and its chairman, the 
Honorable Overton Brooks. Congressman Karth sent his ace staff assistant, Richard P. Hines, to 
Wright-Patterson to investigate all facets of Project Blue Book's operation. Mr. Hines stayed at the 
Project Office from July 11, through July 15, 1961. My predecessor, Lt. Col. Robert Friend, was the 
officer in charge of the project at the time. I talked to Bob about Mr. Hines' visit and he told me that it 
was cordial and thorough. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



45 



Donald E. Keyhoe, the director of NICAP signed the original letter to Congressman Karth. 
Keyhoe requested an open-hearing on UFO's, but in his letter he also laid down some specific 
demands on how the hearing should be conducted. The demands were absurd and Congressman Karth 
rejected them firmly. The reply concerning a UFO open-hearing was addressed to Donald E. Keyhoe 
as Director of NICAP. This letter was signed by Congressman Karth and I insert that letter in its 
entirety because I have seen excerpts of this letter in the NICAP bulletins. I have never seen this letter 
published in NICAP bulletins, however, I have seen paragraphs and sentences of this letter, taken out 
of context, published in some of their bulletins. The full text of this original letter is not easily 
recognized in NICAP bulletins. 

Joseph E. Karth Committee on 

Science 

4 th District, Minnesota and 

Astronautics 

CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES 
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES 
Washington, D.C. 

August 28, 1961 

Major Donald E. Keyhoe 
U.S.M.C. (Ret.) 
Director, NICAP 
1526 Connecticut Ave, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 

Dear Sir, 

I have read with interest the copy of your letter to Chairman Overton Brooks including 
suggested "hearing plans". 

Perhaps I have been mislead in this whole business of UFO. However, it was my belief that 
you, your organization, and others like it , actually had proof that UFO's did in fact exist and 
that you would be prepared to prove this during the course of the hearing. And further, that 
UFO's were not merely the result of space or atmospheric phenomena, but actually were craft 
(of sorts) from other planets. 

I was sadly disappointed as I read your proposed plan, suggestions, and viewpoints. I 
cannot help but feel after so reading, that your primary if not sole objective is to 'belittle', 
'defame', 'ridicule', (with the least possible publicity, you say) and thereby cause the U.S. Air 
Force embarrassment unless they bare to you and others, all information you seek, including 
such information that might involve our nation's security. I too am opposed to unnecessary 
secrecy. However, unnecessary or unwarranted secrecy is nothing more than a matter of 
opinion. And so even though you and I are opposed to such, we may well disagree on extent 
and content. As a former military officer, you in your judgment and knowing all the facts, in 
all probability withheld from the public, knowledge I would not have considered "secret". I 
repeat — I have opposed and will continue to oppose unwarranted secrecy. At the same time I 
will not support a proposition smelling of sour grapes in disguise. 

Your letter to Chairman Brooks (including your proposed plan) concerned itself almost 
totally, in my opinion, with evident dislike and malicious intent toward a great branch of the 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



military. In fact, it sounded to me like nothing more than cheap service rivalry. Now I hasten to 
add that I could be wrong, but I have read many plans in my day and must say I recognize a 
little prejudice and/or dislike when I see it. If you are not in a position to "make a good case" 
that UFO's are some kind of foreign craft, I'm not even interested in holding hearings. This I 
thought to be your purpose. Certainly I'm not interested in listening to headline making 
accusations (prompted it seems by past gripes) in open debate between you and the Air Force. 

It was my every intention to have the Air Force and organizations of good repute, testify on 
different days so as to get all the facts. This is the custom and the protocol of Congressional 
hearings. And I might say — I'm not worried about public alarm — I'm much more concerned 
about grandstand acts of a rabble rousting nature where accusations may be made THAT 
COULDN'T BE ANSWERED BY ANYONE— The Air Force or NICAP. It's apropos to point 
out that under your plan you wouldn't be answering many questions if any — you'd just be 
asking them. Anyone can make someone else look bad under these conditions, and I am not a 
captive of the Air Force , I assure you. 

As I have said, I suffered extreme disappointment as I read your plan. Talk about secrecy! 
In paragraph A of your letter to Chairman Brooks you propose "the Air Force representatives 
will be directed by the sub-committee to answer all of NICAP officials' questions in regard to 
specific UFO sightings, reports, and to all phases of the Air Force investigation". 

However, in paragraph B of the same letter you propose "...and the NICAP representatives 
will answer full, except for revealing names and certain details of a few reports given to 
NICAP confidentially ". (Emphasis added.) What kind of honesty, forthrightness, and fairness 
is that? You demand that a military service of this nation is to divulge everything to you, BUT 
YOU IN TURN cannot give "certain details" because it is confidential (secret)? Oh yes, I have 
also read paragraph C of your proposals (It is also agreed that the Air Force may withhold 
names similarly, where witnesses insisted on this, and also, such minor items as classified 
radar techniques, aircraft speeds and other relatively unimportant points not bearing on these 
main questions at issue .) (Emphasis added). 

Personally, I don't feel I need to elaborate on the generosity equivocated by your language 
in paragraph C. However, no one interested in justice could refrain completely. First of all, 
what witness honestly interested in the security of his nation, is going to insist to the Air Force 
that he remain anonymous? (or to your organization for that matter). Secondly, you generously 
grant the Air Force the privilege of withholding "relatively unimportant points not bearing on 
main questions at issue". Very generous, indeed. If you have information which the Air Force 
is keeping secret, but does not involve national security, I suggest you release it to the 
newspapers. They love it. 

Honestly and sincerely, I make this confession; before I had received copies of your letter 
(and terms) to Chairman Brooks, I was vitally concerned and interested in what positive and 
factual information you had on UFO's and the assistance you might give to the Committee. 
You dispelled any hopes I had relative thereto in the language on page three: "The chief 
concern of NICAP Board members and officials is the increasing secrecy dangers — NOT, at 
this time, final conclusions about UFO's". Undoubtedly, I have been misinformed on the 
purpose of NICAP. I was erroneously led to believe you had factual evidence of some kind 
about UFO's. 

If I have anything to say about it, your terms, conditions, and suggestions, will not be 
accepted. 

Very truly yours, 
Joseph E. Karth 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



47 



Cc: Hon. Overton Brooks, Chairman 
Hon. John McCormack, Majority Leader 
Subcommittee members 

JEK: eb 

Donald E. Keyhoe has had NICAP in his hip pocket form the very beginning when it was 
formed and organized. Keyhoe was retired from the Marine Corps because of physical reasons which 
he suffered in an aircraft accident. He has written a number of books on flying saucers and he has 
always taken the position that saucers are real vehicles and therefore must be of extraterrestrial origin. 
NICAP has been an excellent outlet for his books and for the articles which he has written for various 
magazines. Some place along the way, Keyhoe decided to dislike the Air Force and he has been on 
their back ever since. He has used his organization to harass the Air Force, the Congress, Project Blue 
Book, and SAFOI. There is no doubt in my mind that Air Force reaction to his repeated requests cost 
the American taxpayer thousands and thousands of dollars. Every time he or one of his members 
writes a letter to a Congressman, the Air Force, the DoD, or the President, one of us has to drop 
whatever we are doing and react immediately. Sometimes six or seven people get involved and in 
some cases General officers and undersecretaries must be consulted when answering a UFO request to 
a Congressman. The Pentagon reacts to every UFO query from Congress or from any citizen, domestic 
or foreign. In 1967 and 1968, the Air Force distributed over 40,000 Project Blue Book Booklets. 
During the period from October 1966 through March 1967 SAFOI processed 9,265 pieces of UFO 
correspondence which included 108 Congressional referrals and 123 letters addressed to the President. 
In 1966 and 1967 I was receiving on the average of thirty letters per week and each one had to be 
answered personally. Some of my replies appeared in the NICAP bulletin, but I didn't mind because I 
expressed myself the way I felt. In my personal correspondence, I've always called a spade a spade. 

NICAP and its Director didn't give up very easily. In 1964, after the Socorro sighting they 
began a drive for a Congressional open hearing. Since the Committee On Science and Astronautics 
wouldn't buy their previous hearing requests, they turned their attention on the House Armed Services 
Committee. The Honorable Carl Vinson was chairman of the Committee in 1964 when he replied to a 
request for a "Congressional investigation of the Unidentified Flying Object (UFO) problem". He 
replied thus: 

In view of the continued and thorough investigation made by the Department of the Air Force 
of all reliable reports of Unidentified Flying Objects, I believe that the matter is adequately 
being studied by the Department and there is no reason for a congressional investigation of this 
matter. 

It's important to bring out that not all Congressmen submitted their UFO queries to the 
Pentagon for action. The vast majority of them must have staffs that adequately handle this type of 
correspondence; because I never saw any requests from the majority of them. The few who milked this 
subject always managed to grab a few momentary headlines. 

The pressure was on Congress and every week I'd hear rumblings and rumors that a 
congressional investigation was imminent. Most of these rumors were circulated by NICAP members, 



48 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



but they were taking their toll. My staff was overworked and I was near a nervous breakdown from 
worrying about the politics in the program. General LeBailly, of SAFOI, was also concerned about all 
the rumors so he asked that a "Scientific Advisory Board" be appointed to investigate Project Blue 
Book. When I first heard about this I was livid with anger and I remember saying, "God damned, here 
we go again, another God damned investigation". After the initial shock I began to welcome the 
opportunity to talk to the board. I forgot all about the nervous breakdown and began preparing for the 
presentation. The meeting with the board was to be held on February 3, 1966, at Wright-Patterson. I 
began preparing for their visit during Christmas week, 1965. I thank God that Dave Moody and 
Marilyn Stancombe were still with me during that time. Between the two of them, they could put out 
the work of six people and that happens to be the honest truth! We were ready for the board and we 
were well prepared. The board was composed of a distinguished lot of prominent scientists. Pick out 
any name and you'll find him at or near the top of his scientific expertise. 

The Ad Hoc Committee was composed of the following scientists: 

Dr. Brian O'Brien (Chairman) 
Consulting Physicist 

Dr. Willis H. Ware 
Computer Sciences Division 
The Rand Corporation 

Dr. Launor F. Carter 

Systems Development Corporation 

Mr. Jesse Orlansky 
ODA 

Dr. Carl Sagan 

Harvard University & Cornell University 
Dr. Richard Porter 

I gave my personal briefing in the conference room in the early part of the morning. After the 
briefing, the question and answer period lasted for hours. I don't remember exactly how long it lasted, 
but it was one hell of a long time. After the question session the members proceeded to my office 
where all the UFO records were kept. The members reviewed records which were of interest to them 
because of their field of expertise. They were free to browse through all the records or ask for any 
specific record which they might be interested in. Late in the afternoon, Dr. Brian O'Brien, chairman 
of the board, convened an executive working session. Only members of the board were present and I 
was not asked to attend. The Executive Committee prepared a position paper which was subsequently 
submitted to the Secretary of the Air Force, the Honorable Doctor Harold Brown. The position paper 
is tided Special Report of die USAF Scientific Advisory Board Ad Hoc Committee to Review Project 
" Blue Book ". It is dated March, 1066. The report as submitted to the Secretary is as follows: 



I. INTRODUCTION 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



As requested in a memorandum from Major General E.B.LeBailly, Secretary of the Air Force 
Office of Information, dated 28 September 1965 (Tab A), an SAB Ad Hoc Committee met on 
3 February 1966 to review Project "Blue Book". The objectives of the committee are to review 
the resources and methods of investigation prescribed by Project "Blue Book" and to advise 
the Air Force of any improvements that can be made in the program to enhance the Air Force's 
capability in carrying out its responsibility. 

In order to bring themselves up to date, the members of the Committee initially reviewed the 
findings of previous scientific panels charged with looking into the UFO problem. Particular 
attention was given to the report of the Robertson panel which was rendered in January 1 1953. 
The Committee next heard briefings from the AFSC Foreign Technology Division, which is 
the cognizant Air Force agency that collates information on UFO sightings and monitors 
investigations of individual cases. Finally, the Committee reviewed selected case histories of 
UFO sightings with particular emphasis on those that have not been identified. 

H. DISCUSSION 

Although abut 6% (646) of all sightings (10,147) in the years 1947 through 1965 are listed by 
the Air Force as "Unidentified", it appears to the Committee that most of the cases so listed are 
simply those in which the information available does not provide an adequate basis for 
analysis. In this connection it is important also to note that no unidentified objects other than 
those of an astronomical nature, have ever been observed during routine astronomical studies, 
in spite of the large number of observing hours which have been devoted to the sky. As 
examples of this the Palomar Observatory Sky Atlas contains some 5,000 plates made with 
large instruments with wide field of view; the Harvard Meteor Project of 1954-1958 provided 
some 3,300 hours of observation; the Smithsonian Visual Prairie Network provided 2,500 
observing hours. Not a single unidentified object has been sighted visually in all these 
observations. 

The Committee concluded that in the 19 years since the first UFO was sighted there has been 
no evidence that unidentified flying objects are a threat to our national security. Having arrived 
at this conclusion the Committee then turned its attention to considering how the Air Force 
should handle the scientific aspects of the UFO problem. Unavoidable these are also related to 
Air Force public relations, a subject on which the Committee is not expert. Thus the 
recommendations which follow are made simply from the scientific point of view. 

III. CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 

It is the opinion of the Committee that the present Air Force program dealing with 
UFO sightings has been well organized, although the resources assigned to it (only one officer, 
a sergeant, and secretary) have been quite limited. In 19 years and more than 10,000 sightings 
recorded and classified, there appears to be no verified and fully satisfactory evidence of any 
case that is clearly outside the framework of presently known science and technology. 
Nevertheless, there is always the possibility that analysis of new sightings may provide some 
additions to scientific knowledge of value to the Air Force. Moreover, some of the case records 
which the Committee looked at that were listed as "identified" were sightings where the 
evidence collected was too meager or too indefinite to permit positive listing in the identified 
category. Because of this the Committee recommends that the present program be strengthened 
to provide opportunity for scientific investigation of selected sightings in more detail and depth 
than has been possible to date. 

To accomplish this it is recommended that: 

A. Contracts be negotiated with a few selected universities to provide scientific 
teams to investigate promptly and in depth certain selected sightings of UFO's . Each team 



50 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



should include at least one psychologist, preferably one interested in clinical psychology, and 
at least one physical scientist, preferably an astronomer or geophysicist familiar with 
atmospheric physics. The universities should be chosen to provide good geographical 
distribution, and should be within convenient distance of a base of the Air Force Systems 
Command (AFSC). 

B. At each AFSC base an officer skilled in investigation (but not necessarily with 
scientific training) should be designated to work with the corresponding university team for 
that geographical section. The local representative of the Air Force Office of Special 
Investigations (OSI) might be a logical choice for this. 

C. One university or one not-for-profit organization should be selected to coordinate 
the work of the teams mentioned under A above, and also to make certain of very close 
communication and coordination with the office of Project Blue Book. 

It is thought that perhaps 100 sightings a year night be subjected to this close study, and that 
possibly an average of 10 man days might be required per sighting so studied. The information 
provided by such a program might bring to light new facts of scientific value, and would 
almost certainly provide a far better basis than we have today for decision on a long term UFO 
program. 

The scientific reports on these selected sightings, supplementing the present program of the 
Project Blue Book office, should strengthen the public position of the Air Force on UFO's. It 
is, therefore, recommended that: 

A. These reports be printed in full and available on request. 

B. Suitable abstracts or condensed versions be printed and included in, or as 
supplements to, the published reports of Project Blue Book. 

C. The form of report (as typified by "Project Blue Book" dated 1 February 1966) be 
expanded, and anything which might suggest that information is being withheld (such as the 
wording on page 5 of the above cited reference) be deleted. The form of this report can be of 
great importance in securing public understanding and should be given detailed study by an 
appropriate Air Force office. 

D. The reports "Project Blue Book" should be given wide unsolicited circulation 
among prominent members of the Congress and other public persons as a further aid to public 
understanding of the scientific approach being taken by the Air Force in attacking the UFO 
problem. 

I was not disappointed with the findings of the Scientific Advisory Board, however, I had 
hoped that their recommendation would have included a statement regarding the possible termination 
of the project. No such statement was forthcoming, however, their statement regarding the use of 
universities to study some UFO phenomena convinced Dr. Brown that this was the route that the Air 
Force should take. I consider Dr. O'Brien's Ad Hoc Committee a milestone in the final termination of 
the Project. It happened to work out that was because at that point in time we were worried about 
survival and not thinking about terminating the project. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



51 



THE MICHIGAN FLAP 

I had weathered a few controversial flaps in the past and I was just about to get involved in 
another. The weather around Dayton in March, 1966 had been unseasonably mild. The rest of the 
Midwest was getting weather just like ours. I normally braced myself at that time of the year because 
invariably something always happened. Jack Jones of the Dayton Journal Herald calls the spring, "The 
silly season", and I agree with him. I had expected something to happen, but I was totally unprepared 
for Frank Mannor's sighting at Dexter, Michigan on 17 March 1966. When I got to my office the 
following morning, the switchboard lines were already backing up. News of Frank Mannor's sighting 
reached the American people via the National Wire Services and the newspapers were calling for an 
instant evaluation. I had decided not to make any comments except that we were investigating. I got 
on the line with Selfridge AFB and told them that I was sending Dave Moody to assist them in 
checking out flight activities, radar, experimental work, and laboratory work at the university. I also 
decided to send Dr. Hynek to conduct an on the spot investigation of the area, the witnesses, and to 
make contact with the law enforcement officers in the area. I would stay at Wright-Patterson and guide 
the operation from my office and wait for the information to filter in. In the meantime, I would check 
with the National Centers for unusual activity. The next day, Moody called with a negative report. He 
had also checked out the radar antenna and we decided that couldn't have been the cause. Hynek 
called early in the morning and told me that reporters and TV cameramen were dogging him 
everywhere he went. I told him he'd just have to put up with it and do the best he could, but I could 
tell he was pouting. He claimed that he just couldn't do the job with so many people around. He asked 
me if he could have a news conference and I said no. This was setting a precedent and I didn't like it. 
The next day Hynek called again, and informed me that he had a possible solution to Frank Mannor's 
sighting and I asked him for the details. My secretary, Marilyn Beaumer Stancombe, was on the line 
taking all the information in short hand. He told me that the solution was "Swamp Gas". I told him to 
check this out with his colleagues at the university and let me know their reaction. In the meantime, I 
would check it out with the chemists and botanists on the base. He also wanted me to arrange for a 
press conference from the Information Office at Selfridge AFB. I was against this from the beginning, 
but he was insistent and I told him I'd check it out with the Pentagon. I talked to Major Davis and Sara 
Hunt of SAFOI about the press conference and neither one of them was enthusiastic about the idea, 
however, in this particular case it could have its merits. Since it was setting a precedent, the decision 
would have to be made at the top. That evening at 6:30 p.m. I got a call from the Pentagon. It was 
Major Davis, and General Garland had made an affirmative decision with regards to the press 
conference. This time it would be an exception; however, I was not to submit requests of this type in 
the future. Hynek called me at the house at around nine o'clock that night and I gave him the news. 
The first thing the next morning I called up Selfridge aid told them to arrange the conference. 
Someone suggested the Detroit Press Club as the site of the conference and I couldn't see any 
objection to that. The reason for the change of sites was the convenience to reporters. The Detroit 
Press Club is much more accessible than the Selfridge Information office. 



52 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



I did have specific instructions for Hynek. I wanted to see a copy of his news release before he 
distributed it to the reporters. I also wanted him to read his release to Sara Hunt at SAFOI, two hours 
before the conference, so that we could prepare copies for release to the National Media from the DoD 
press desk. Hynek read his release to Sara and copies were ready for distribution at the designated 
time. While Hynek was holding his news conference in Detroit, the Pentagon was releasing his finding 
to the Media in Washington, D.C. 

The project took its lumps because many people had not heard of "Swamp Gas", Misama, 
Foxtails, Jack O'Lanterns, Will O'the Wisp, Foolish Fire, or Ignis Fatuces. The news media played 
this sighting to the hilt. The publicity that this sighting received was unbelievable. Hynek became an 
instant celebrity and the sightings started pouring in. We had a total of 1,112 sightings in 1966 and that 
total has never been equaled since. 

The Michigan Flap also brought cries of indignity from some quarters. NICAP again started a 
drive to get Congress to listen to its pleas for a congressional hearing. NICAP acquired an ally which 
they hadn't up to now. Congressman Gerald Ford got on the UFO bandwagon. It just so happens that 
Dexter was in Congressman Ford's district. It was pure politics and he made the national news by 
demanding that either the Science and Astronautics Committee or the House Armed Services 
Committee schedule hearings on the subject of UFO's. He suggested that they invite testimony from 
both the executive branch of the government and some of the persons who claim to have seen UFO's. 
Congressman Ford cited two news media columnists to support his position. Roscoe Drummond wrote 
a column in which he stated that, "Maybe all of these reported sightings are whimsical, imaginary, or 
unreal, but we need a more credible and detached appraisal of the evidence than we are getting". He 
went on to say, "We need to get all the data drawn together in one place and examined far more 
objectively than anyone has done so far. A stable public opinion will come from a trustworthy look at 
the evidence, not from belittling it". And as a clincher he added, "The time has come for the President 
or Congress to name an objective and respected panel to investigate, appraise, and report on all present 
and future evidence of what is going on". Mr. Drummond has a perfect right to express his opinion, 
however, I don't know of one single responsible Air Force official who ever belittled UFO's or the 
UFO program. We called them as we saw them and there was no intent to belittle anyone or any event. 
Congressman Ford also used Bulkley Griffin's column to further support his position. Mr. Griffin 
wrote in one of his articles that, "A main conclusion can be briefly stated. It is that the Air Force is 
misleading the public by its continuing campaign to produce and maintain belief that all sightings can 
be explained away as misidentified familiar objects, such as balloons, stars, and aircraft." The record 
speaks for itself and neither the Air Force or myself have to defend ourselves against such 
irresponsible statements. Someone on Congressman Ford's staff didn't really complete his homework 
or he deliberately stacked the deck in such a way that all the evidence was in favor of an open hearing. 
When I heard about Congressman Ford's proposal I had to shake my head and laugh. An open hearing 
would be a circus and I didn't want any part of it. Congressman Ford did get his wish, a congressional 
hearing was imminent. Someone should ask Congressman Ford what it cost the American taxpayer to 
hold that hearing and then ask him if he would like to reimburse the taxpayer for the expense; because 
that hearing was totally unnecessary. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



53 



THE BEGINNING OF A CONGRESSIONAL COUP 

It was now pretty well established that a Congressional hearing on UFO's was going to take 
place. The rumors in the Pentagon were running wild. During the last week of March 1966, Secretary 
Brown and General McConnell had been appearing before the House Armed Services Committee to 
discuss the Air Force Posture. At one of the latter meetings, Chairman L. Mendel Rivers had asked 
Secretary Brown to be prepared to discuss UFO's at the next posture meeting which was scheduled for 
5 April 1966. The wheels began to turn and panic started to strike the hearts of some individuals. 
General Corbin of Legislative and Liaison at the Pentagon started the ball rolling. His office informed 
the Public Affairs Office at the Air Force Systems Command that a hearing was imminent and to alert 
Brig. General Arthur W. Cruikshank. Colonel McGarrity of Public Affairs called General Cruikshank 
on Thursday at approximately two p.m. When General Cruikshank received the call from McGarrity, 
he got all excited and hollered for Ivy Nammolite, his secretary. Ivy entered his Inner Sanctum and he 
told her, "Get me that God damned Quintanilla". You would have thought that I was responsible for 
the hearings. Ivy called me at my office and I asked, "What's up?" She said, "I don't know. He just 
got a call from Andrews and he's all excited." The Pentagon had already alerted me that morning to 
start packing, but I wasn't going to do anything until the General had been appraised of what was 
going to transpire. On rry way to the General's office, a thousand thoughts ran through my mind. 
Cruikshank was not an easy person to communicate with so I really didn't know what to expect. I 
walked in his office and he immediately told me that McGarrity had told him that he might have to 
back-up the Secretary at the hearing. I didn't show it at the time, but I remember a feeling of disaster 
creeping over me. They would tear him to pieces, he knew nothing about the technical aspects of the 
program and he never bothered to find out because that was my responsibility. After he calmed down, 
he told me, "you've got two hours to pump me". I shook my head and said, "There's no way for you to 
retain the information in such a short period of time". He thought about it for a minute and said, "I 
won't go, you're going, get ready." He called up McGarrity and told him that I would represent the 
project at the hearing. Cruikshank told Ivy, "Get Quintanilla out of here tonight". It was late, I didn't 
have any travel orders, plane reservations were all booked, and I wasn't packed. Ivy, cool as a 
cucumber, told me to go home and get ready and she would call me later. She called later and 
everything was in order. She booked me on a military T-39 going to Andrews at 5:30 a.m. the next 
morning. I could pick up my travel orders from the guard and it meant a good nights sleep for me. The 
next morning while Washington was still sleeping, our little T-39 was gliding into Andrews. 
McGarrity took me to the Pentagon and a hectic weekend began. He turned me over to the staff in 
Research and Development and headed back to Andrews. Secretary Brown needed a position paper by 
Monday morning so we had to get started. There were numerous people involved and I can't honestly 
remember all of their names. Lawyers, scientists, administrators, and information specialists were all 
involved at one time or another, while the position paper was being prepared. The position paper was 
revised and edited at least a dozen times on Saturday and Sunday. Monday morning the paper was 
submitted to the Secretary and he made a few revisions. Secretary Brown writes very small and he 
writes on the right hand margin of the paper. His suggestions are short and to the point. It amazes me 



54 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



how the Pentagon gets anything done, but they manage to produce a lot of paper with a lot of words. I 
didn't think the position paper would be ready in time, but it was. 

Over the weekend, General Corbin had decided that Dr. J. Allen Hynek, the Project Blue Book 
Consultant might be needed at the hearing. Hynek was contacted and he immediately left for 
Washington, D.C. He arrived on Sunday night and came over to the Pentagon on Monday. He was 
introduced to General Corbin and the basic proceedings of the hearing were discussed. I had never 
been exposed to a hearing before, so General Corbin emphasized that I was not to lose my temper. I 
was to think about my responses and to answer all questions truthfully. If I didn't know the answer to 
a question, I was to respond according and not be ashamed. He asked me if I was going to make a 
public statement for the record, and I replied I was not. He asked Dr. Hynek if he was going to make a 
public statement for the record, and he also replied that he was not. I'm indebted to General Corbin for 
his advise and for preparing me for the Monumental Happening of my life. He was good, he was 
damned good. The moment of truth had arrived, it was a warm, sunny day on April 5, 1966. General 
Corbin informed Dr. Hynek and I that we were to meet with Secretary Brown in fifteen minutes. I 
started to shake, after all, I had never met the number one man in the Air Force before. We walked 
down the corridor to the Secretary's office and it sort of calmed me down. We walked into the 
Secretary's office and he was standing behind a massive mahogany desk. It must have been twelve 
feet long. We were introduced, shook hands, and were seated in front of his desk. I glanced around the 
room and I could see glittering stars glued to broad shoulders all around the room. I had never seen so 
many General officers in all my life. My Monumental Happening had begun. Secretary brown is a 
warm, compassionate, intelligent human being. He asked Dr. Hynek and I questions for twenty-five 
minutes, and I asked myself, "How is he going to remember all of our answers"? When the time came, 
he was terrific, he didn't miss a lick. 

They drove us down to the hill. I had a window side seat and I was looking at the scenery, but 
my eyes and my brain were not registering its beauty. My thoughts flashed back to that cold 
November day in 1929 when I walked across the Rio Grande Bridge and to my subsequent boyhood. 
In the few minutes that it took us to drive to the hill, my whole life time passed before me. I saw a 
picture of a small boy dragging a long white sack and he was picking cotton. That same boy was 
picking beans a little later. The climate changed and he had a bucket in his hand and he was picking 
coal along the railroad tracks. The scene changed and he was walking across the San Pedro creek 
bridge on his way to the Robert B. Green Hospital with his right eye swollen shut and it was as big as 
a hand ball. A kind of young intern lanced it and it was as good as new a couple of days later. I had 
experienced this very same thing in 1944 when I was based in New Guinea. Six Japanese Betty's had 
penetrated our defenses and were dropping bombs. By the time I got out of my tent, I could hear the 
bombs whistling and they seemed awfully close. It was pitch black and I started running for my 
foxhole, but I never made it. I tripped over the guide rope of my tent and fell forward on my stomach. 
I started digging the ground with my fingernails and my boyhood experience passed in front of me in 
those few seconds. I had been scared in 1944, was I starting to feel that way again? I had been in 
danger then, but the stakes had changed since then and now the only thing I had to fear was fear itself. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



55 



I took a deep breath and I remembered what General Corbin had told me. . ."Stay cool, don't lose your 
temper, answer the questions truthfully. . ." 

THE COUP 

Our car was coming into the parking area of the Same Raybum building and my mind snapped 
back to the present. Our escort was waiting for us at the front door and he led us to a foyer off to the 
side of the main committee room. I was getting fidgety, my stomach was starting to knot up; so I got 
us and started pacing the hall. After a few minutes, a member of the council staff opened the side door 
and announced that we could come in. I was one of the last ones to enter the committee room and then 
all the doors were locked. I looked at the Committee members sitting behind their desks and said to 
myself, this isn't going to be a circus, it could get kind of rough. The hearing was gaveled open by the 
Honorable L. Mendel Rivers, Chairman of the House Armed Services Committee. After the 
introductions we were seated at the head of the table with Dr. Brown. Dr. Hynek was to Dr. Brown's 
right and I was to his left. Midway through Dr. Brown's statement to the Committee, Chairman Rivers 
interrupted him and asked, "Mr. Secretary, let me ask you this. Should this be an executive session?" 
Secretary Brown replied, "No nothing I have said so far has been classified, and nothing I will say." 
The Chairman asked, "Is there any reason to keep this executive? I think we have a lot cf people 
outside of the door. Let them come in." With that statement, the Chairman of the House Armed 
Services Committee pulled a political coup from which NICAP and the UFO buffs have never 
recovered. L. Mendel Rivers had pulled the rug from under the advocates of a public hearing. The 
hearing was completely open to the news media and to the public. NICAP, in their future news 
bulletins would cry "foul"; however, the hearing on Unidentified Objects was a matter of 
Congressional record and all the proceedings were printed in document number 55 dated April 15, 
1966. 

THE HEARING 

The hearing proceeded extremely well. Dr. Brown was answering the questions beautifully 
and then Chairman Rivers asked Dr. Hynek, "Is there anything you would like to say to us"? Dr. 
Hynek : "Mr. Chairman, the press has recently treated me rather unkindly." The Chairman : "You 
should be chairman of this committee." Dj\ Hynek : "The press has described me as "a puppet of the 
Air Force and has stated that I say only what the Air Force tells me to say. I would like to do 
something which may be a little daring, and read to the Committee a statement I have prepared which 
has certainly not been dictated by the Air Force." General Corbin was seated behind me and to my left. 
When Hynek announced that he would make a statement, I heard General Corbin say, "Oh crap!". He 
didn't say it very loud but I knew he was upset. Nobody really gave a damn whether Hynek made a 
statement or not. I remember being extremely angry. I wasn't angry because of his profound 
statement; the truth of the matter is that Hynek has never made a meaningful or profound statement 



56 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



with regards to UFO's since I've been on the program. I was angry because I felt he had been disloyal 
to General Corbin. He had told Corbin that he was not going to make a statement and then he pulled 
out a five page neatly typed statement from his briefcase. As far as I was concerned, he had 
deliberately and with premeditated motives lied to General Corbin. I had been losing confidence in 
Hynek for some time and after the hearing he never regained my original confidence. 

As the hearing proceeded, Congressman Stratton from New York, got on the photo kick. Life 
magazine had printed some photos of alleged UFO's. A couple of them had been taken in Australia. 
The congressional record indicates the following testimony: 

Mr. Stratton : Has anybody examined them in the Air Force? 

Major Quintanilla : Mr. Stratton, we have asked for the negatives of those pictures, but the 
citizens will not turn them over to the Air Force. You cannot force them to turn them over to 
the Air Force. 

Mr. Stratton : They turned them over to Life magazine, haven't they? 
Major Quintanilla : You will have to ask them. I don't know, sir. 
Mr. Stratton : What has Life got? 
Major Quintanilla : I don't know, sir. 

Mr. Stratton : Have you examined those particular instances without finding what Life has? 
Major Quintanilla : The Air Force has not investigated these instances, sir, and the photographs 
have not been examined because the negatives have never been turned over to the Air Force. 
Mr. Stratton : You have not been in touch with Life magazine to find out what they have? 
Major Quintanilla : No sir, we have not. 

At this point, Congressman Stratton was starting to get to me. I considered his questions 
irrelevant and political. Hell, I didn't go around the country tracking down every alleged UFO photo 
which appeared in National magazines. I also didn't track down UFO photos which appeared in girlie 
magazines. Some of those photos were more realistic than the ones which appeared in Life magazine. 

Mr. Stratton : Don't you think it might be wise to undertake to make an effort to find out 
whether Life has the negatives, for example, or whether they have been in touch with the 
individuals concerned? 

I was just about to reply to Stratton's question when Secretary Brown whispered to me, "tell 
him yes", and I immediately replied, "yes sir". I was going to reply completely different than what is 
in the record, but all it would have done was prolong the hearing. The rest of the questions were 
straight forward and Chairman Rivers kept the hearing on a business-like basis. We adjourned at 1 1 :55 
a.m. and Dr. Brown was immediately besieged by reporters and TV cameramen. I picked up my 
briefcase and scooted out the side door. My Monumental Happening had just come to a close and 
everything else that happened in the program after that would be anticlimactic. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 57 



dr. james Mcdonald makes the scene 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Dr. James Edward McDonald is a professor of Meteorology and Climatology and a Senior 
Physicist at the Institute of Atmospheric Physics, University of Arizona. Up until May 20, 1966, I had 
never heard of James E. McDonald, however, our paths were to cross numerous times during the 
ensuing years. McDonald had called General Cruikshank and requested permission to review 
everything we had on Project Blue Book. He arrived at Wright- Patterson on Jun 6, 1966, and we 
didn't hit it off from the beginning. People don't normally affect me this way, however, I formed an 
opinion about the professor from the University of Arizona almost immediately. McDonald had 
access to all of the information in Project Blue Book files. He was critical from the very beginning 
because he had already formed a preconceived opinion of the project. The evaluations didn't suit him 
and he spent hours reviewing the records. He was a believer of extraterrestrial visitation and no 
amount of evidence could convince him otherwise. He was looking for flaws in our analysis of the 
information. He was also quite critical of the Project Blue Book Consultant, Dr. J. Allen Hynek. 
McDonald accused my staff and I of not giving the Extraterrestrial hypothesis adequate consideration. 
He was wrong, but he was not easily convinced. I remember driving him to the club that evening and 
we got into a shouting session in my car, again on the extraterrestrial hypothesis. By this time, I was 
firmly convinced that McDonald was going to be a pain in the ass and was going to cause me 
countless hours of needless work. I called up Lt. Col. Maston Jacks at SAFOI the next day and asked 
him what he knew about Dr. McDonalds. He said he didn't know him personally, however, he had 
been stationed at SAC Headquarters when the professor had taken it upon himself to question the Air 
Force's wisdom in placing Titan Missiles in the Tucson area. Jacks recalled that McDonald had put 
the Air Force on the firing line in the summer of 1960. He claimed that the Air Force was dealing in 
half truths and was deliberately deceiving the people. He was to make that charge again years later 
about the UFO program. The same charge, but a different scene and a different set of bad guys. 
McDonald was grabbing the headlines for awhile, but the Air Force and the people of Tucson won the 
battle and the Titans were placed in position without any damaging incidents. So James E. McDonald 
was back in circulation with a different crusade and this time he believed he was loaded for bear. 

Mcdonald confronts general cruikshank 

On the second day of his visit, he requested an audience with General Cruikshank. He also 
requested to see Dr. Anthony Cacioppo, our Chief Scientist. Dr. Cacioppo was Cruikshank' s chief 
expert on all scientific matters. Dr. Cacioppo knew the UFO program better than any civilian in the 
Foreign Technology Division (formerly ATIC). ATIC became FTD on July 1, 1963. McDonald had 
his personal talk with Cruikshank in his office and I was left outside twiddling my thumbs. McDonald 
had a briefcase full of impressive looking documents, papers, books, articles, etc. Every once in awhile 
I would catch some gist of the conversation, but never enough to make sense. I wasn't at all happy 
with the amount of time that McDonald was spending with Cruikshank. My total time spent talking to 
Cruikshank never even came close to what McDonald had used in just one visit. McDonald scared the 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



59 



living hell out of Cruikshank. He told the General that he was going back to Washington and was 
going to present his case before numerous congressman. As soon as McDonald left the office, 
Cruikshank hit the panic button. It is sad to see a tiger reduced to a pussy cat, but that is exactly what 
McDonald did to Cruikshank. From that day forward, I lost all respect for the "tiger". Cruikshank did 
something that no Commanding Officer before him or after him did to me or to the project. He never 
gave us a chance to have our day in court to answer the charges which McDonald made against the 
project. He accepted McDonald's criticism of the project as fact and he proceeded from there. It was 
because of Cruikshank and McDonald that a few months later I decided to submit my request for 
transfer. 

THE BLUE RIBBON INVESTIGATION 

Without consulting me or the Pentagon, General Cruikshank decided to appoint a Blue Ribbon 
Panel of three officers to investigate Project Blue Book. I wasn't formally informed of the 
investigation, but I knew what was going on and remember saying, "Another God damned 
investigation. When are they going to leave us alone?" Cruikshank was transferred to the west coast in 
August of 1966, but the damage had already been done and his momentous decision turned out to be a 
waste of time, money, and resources. The panel was composed of Colonel Lou De Goes, top notch 
administrator, Little All American, and a number one hand ball player; Lt. Colonel Boyce Smith, 
dogmatic technician, excellent administrator, top notch meteorologist, and a lousy golfer; and Major 
Muarry Dolan, an excellent physicist, a dedicated professional officer, and a very unimpressive 
piccolo player. This panel was authorized to use outside facilities and to call on consultants for help 
they needed. The investigation was thorough, but hell, we'd been investigated before and it wasn't 
anything new. My staff and I weren't supposed to know what was going on, but sooner or later they'd 
have to come to us for the records and we'd be able to put the pieces together. This is exactly what 
happened, the panel came to our office and requested that certain UFO records be turned over to them 
for review. It was quite evident what had happened. The records that the panel wanted were those 
records which the hobby clubs had claimed were of paramount importance to prove their cause, and 
the extraterrestrial hypothesis. Most of these sightings had received newspaper coverage and were well 
known to the UFO buffs. I suspect that McDonald gave Cruikshank or Lou De Goes a list of the cases, 
because they're all cases which the UFO buffs like to write about. The panel asked for such cases as 
Chites-Whitted; Killian; 1952, Washington, D.C.; Ravenna, Ohio; Socorro, N.M.; Dexter and 
Hillsdale Michigan; Oklahoma; Heflin; Angleton, Texas; St. Clair County; Moneta, Virginia; Reeves 
in Florida; Exeter, N.H.; Leveland, Texas; Red Bluff, California; and approximately on hundred and 
fifty other cases. All of the cases that they asked for were well publicized and in most cases the UFO 
buffs didn't like the Air Force evaluation. The study was supposed to last three months, but it lasted 
closer to six months. Cruikshank wasn't around to receive his dearly beloved report, be had already 
transferred to the west coast and had a top position in the Minute Man Program. Colonel Raymond S. 
Sleeper became the Foreign Technology Division Commander in September, 1966. He received the 
panel report and filed it someplace; because I never heard any more about it after that. The 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



investigation was an internal affair, therefore, the report went directly from the panel to the 
Commander. The outcome of the whole report was that the panel was satisfied with Project Blue 
Book's performance and they gave us a clean bill of health. Most people in the organization and 
[MISSING SENTENCE] place between June and December of 1966. During this investigation, Dr. 
McDonald managed to make another trip to Wright-Patterson. This time McDonald was more 
interested in talking to members of the panel, but they were scheduled for trips to Rand and to the 
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), so he never got to talk to them on that trip. 

QUINTANILLA REQUESTS A TRANSFER 

De Goes asked me to take care of McDonald in his absence and I went through the ceiling like 
a cork screw. I didn't like McDonald's attitude and he didn't like my plausible explanations so why 
should I escort him around and baby sit with him. I was really fed up with the whole works at that 
time. On July 8, 1966, I asked Marilyn to take a letter. I addressed the following letter to the 
Commander: 

Request consideration to be given to the reassignment of the undersigned to another 
organization in the Air Force or to another Deputy within FTD. I have been in my present 
position for three years and have recently lost any objective viewpoint, which I had possessed, 
in the analysis of reports dealing with Unidentified Flying Objects (flying saucers). I 
personally do not believe reports dealing with UFO sightings represent vehicles from outer 
space. 

I believe that three years in a job of this type should be enough for any officer. I am tired of 
fighting off my inquisitors, the press, magazine writers, radio, T.V., and professional agitators. 
I would appreciate it if you would seriously consider my transfer. 

When I got through dictating the letter, I could see tears in Marilyn's eyes, so I left the office. 
I came back about a half an hour later and the letter was on my desk ready for my signature. I signed it 
immediately and sent it forward. That afternoon, when everyone was gone I received a call from Dr. 
Cacioppo's office. He wanted to talk to me before I went home, could I drop by his office? I didn't 
waste any time getting to his office and I'm sure he could see how distraught I was. The first thing he 
said was, "What's wrong, Hector"? And I told him exactly how I felt and he understood and he 
promised to help. I still wanted a transfer and he promised to help in that department also. General 
Cruikshank had already signed out of the organization and the new Commander was not scheduled to 
arrive until late August; so my letter ended up on the interim Commander's desk, Colonel Florian 
Holm. Colonel Holm knew my problem and how I felt, so he gave Big John "AC" Garcia, our 
personnel officer, the task of getting me transferred out of the organization. John came into my office 
and asked, "What's the matter, Quint?" I looked up at him and said, "Get me out of here, John, get me 
the hell out of here, I've had it". Then he remarked, "the big man says you can go, where would you 
like to go?" I told him that I wanted to go to Eglin, Patrick, or Albuquerque in that order. John had his 
contacts and he got me a tentative assignment to Eglin, but the transfer never came through. The 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



61 



Pentagon heard about my impending assignment and they asked that my transfer be held in abeyance 
and so I stayed with the Project until it was cancelled. 

THE AIR FORCE'S NUMBER ONE CRITIC 

I managed to survive McDonald's visit in July, but his criticism of the Project and of the Air 
Force continued at an accelerated pace. He was making frequent speeches all over the country and the 
newspapers were giving him copious copy. During this period, he managed to get an audience to listen 
to his prepared speeches every time he went to Washington and amongst this group there was always a 
sprinkling of high government workers who went to listen to him out of curiosity. He became a UFO 
consultant to NICAP and this gave him added prestige in his new field of expertise. 1967 was a banner 
year for Dr. McDonald and he was quoted frequently in the newspapers. The April 6, 1967 Arizona 
Daily Wildcat quotes him as saying that, "The public has been mislead by Air Force reports. I feel that 
the Air Force has misled us for twenty years. I equate almost all of that misrepresentation to 
incompetence and superficiality on the part of the Air Force investigators involved with Project Blue 
Book and its forerunners. Nobody there with any strong scientific competence is looking into the 
problem. In fact, I have found no one connected with the Air Force program who was at all familiar 
with details of the past history of the UFO problem. There is, of course, lots of expertise and 
competence at the disposal of the Air Force; they just haven't utilized any of it on the UFO problem." 
He was also quoted in the same article as saying, "NICAP and several other independent and private 
groups unofficially have been investigating the problem for many years, and I regard their methods 
and results as vastly superior to those of Project Blue Book within the United States Air Force. 
Incidentally, I have made this same statement to the Air Force." McDonald made the latter statement 
to me and I accepted it as his biased opinion and he fet it go at that. I consider my opinion, with 
regards to the UFO problem, far superior to his. I consider McDonald's constant prolific writings of 
the alleged UFO problem to be a pure waste of time. There is no UFO problem, consequently, the 
money, time, resources, and intellectual discussions spent on this subject could not best be utilized in 
raising the standard of existence for the Mexicans, Indians, Negroes, Puerto Ricans, etc. I've also often 
said to myself, "God damned, if McDonald would only exert his energies and drive in the right 
direction, he'd be a phenomena in itself." I sincerely believe this. He is intelligent, dogmatic, 
thorough, and dedicated. If he would set his mind to it, he could ease the plight of the American Indian 
in no time at all, after all, he's living in their territory. He'd give the Bureau of Indian Affairs fits, day 
and night. To each his own; it's a damn shame that so much talent is going to waste. 

Some place along McDonald's life, he acquired an intense dislike for the United States Air 
Force. He has continued to criticize this branch of the service with intense emotion. On April 22, 
1967, he presented a speech before the American Society of Newspaper Editors in Washington, D.C. 
The title of his speech was "UFO's: Greatest Scientific Problem of Our Times?" McDonald discussed 
a little bit of everything in his presentation. He touched on the Robertson panel report, Air Force 
Regulation 200-2, the Conspiracy Hypothesis, the scientists view on UFO's, the nature of the UFO 
evidence, the need for a Congressional investigation, the University of Colorado Program, the transfer 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



of research responsibility, the global nature of the problem, some illustrative UFO reports, and then he 
inserted some editorial comments. His speech had a little bit for everybody, but it didn't really cause 
much of a ripple among the newspaper editors. Maybe two of his concluding paragraphs had 
something to do with this. He remarked that, "Scattered through the comments just cited, one finds 
remarks indicating that there may be a few editors who are speculating on whether the UFO's are 
extraterrestrial in origin. I believe, on the basis of my extensive study of the UFO problem, that this 
hypothesis must, in fact, now be given serious scientific evaluation". He ddn't grab any headlines 
with his speech, but after his presentation he remarked to one of the reporters that in 1953 the CIA had 
instructed the Air Force to adopt a systematic policy of debunking "flying saucers". This is nothing 
but pure crap. He took a sentence out of context from the Robertson panel report, and expanded it 
completely out of proportion. The truth of the matter is that the CIA has never been actively involved 
in the UFO program. Passively, they convened the Robertson Panel and that was the end of their 
participation. It's fashionable to rip into the CIA, but in this particular case, I think they showed astute 
judgment by not involving their time and resources into this Air Force program. 

Dr. Donald H. Menzel, Harvard University, also presented a paper before the American 
Society of Newspaper Editors. The title of his paper was "UFO: Fact or Fiction?" It was an excellent 
paper, down to earth, factual, enlightening, but it was not at all controversial so his newspaper copy 
was practically zero. The truth of the matter is that Dr. Menzel, in his study of flying saucers, has 
never been given the credit which he deserves. He has helped the Air Force program on numerous 
occasions and for this I wish to thank him. The World of Flying Saucers by Donald H. Menzel and 
Lyle G. Boyd is an excellent book on the UFO phenomena. 

Mcdonald goes to Australia 

Dr. James E. McDonald has not confined his criticism of the Air Force's handling of UFO's to 
this country. In the summer of 1967, he took a trip to Australia, New Zealand, and Tasmania. To top it 
all off, the office of Naval Research (ONR) sponsored this trip. While McDonald was down under, he 
made numerous UFO speeches, appeared frequently on television, and granted copious newspaper 
interviews. I had heard that he was making the trip, but I never paid much attention to it, until I got a 
call from the Pentagon. Did I know a Dr. James E. McDonald? Hell yes, I knew McDonald. Did I 
know that he was in Australia criticizing the Air Force UFO program? I replied "So what's new, he 
does this all the time". Whenever he criticizes the Air Force or some other scientists, he does it under 
the guise of traditional science; however, when you criticize him, then this amounts to a personal 
attack or character assassination. My caller (the reason I didn't know this guy was because he was 
from the DoD and was not one of my normal contacts) then asked my personal opinion of McDonald 
and I leveled with him. Whew! Stand by, he'd call me back. He called back a little later and I found 
out what the problem was. McDonald in some of his interviews had criticized the U.S. Air Force and 
the government in general for their inept handling of the UFO problem. The Ambassador wanted to 
know why ONR had sent McDonald to Australia to talk on UFO's and to criticize a sister service. 
When I learned that the Navy had sponsored his trip, I called them every dirty name in the book. I 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



63 



never messed into Navy affairs and I didn't want them messing into my program. I was going to write 
an official fetter to the Navy asking for an explanation, but more pressing matters demanded my time; 
so I never got around to it. The matter of sponsoring McDonald's trip to Australia was brought to the 
attention of the Navy by another source, but they white-washed the whole thing. The truth of the 
matter is that McDonald's ONR contract should be brought to the attention of the Government 
Accounting Office and the two people (McDonald and his contract monitor) involved should be 
required to reimburse the government for an illegitimate trip. According to the white -wash, McDonald 
was in Australia on some important atmospheric physics research: however, if the number of UFO 
speeches, television appearances, and newspaper interviews are indicators of his work, then he spent a 
hell of a lot of time on UFO's and very little time on atmospheric research. My consultant, Dr. J. Allen 
Hynek, once asked my permission to take a boondoggle trip to Mexico City. He wanted to study the 
Mexico City power outages to see if there was any connection with UFO's. I not only said no... but 
hell, no! He took the trip as a private citizen and he paid his own way. I wanted no part of his trip. I 
can recognize a boondoggle when it's presented to me. My responsibilities were continental UTC's, 
not international trips spiced with a few UFO interviews. 

THE UFO SYMPOSIUM 

McDonald had been busy making UFO speeches during the summer of 1968. He kept bad- 
mouthing the Air Force, but by this time he had lost a lot of his steam. He did, however, convince the 
burro (Jack Ass) Club to hear his presentation on Jun 3, 1968. His speech to this group was presented 
at a luncheon meeting in the Raybum Building. The significance of this speech is that the Burro Club 
is composed of Congressional Aides and Congressional Saff Members. The title of McDonald's 
presentation was "Does Congress Have a Responsibility to Investigate the UFO Problem?" In his 
presentation he criticized the Air Force and also the University of Colorado. The University's study 
wasn't complete yet; but he took pot-shots at them anyway. When I read the presentation which 
McDonalds had made before the club I braced myself for another one of their investigations. 
McDonald found a receptive sponsor for an inquiry in Congressman J. Edward Roush, member of the 
Committee on Science and Astronautics. Roush had for some time been an ally of the UFO groups. 
They couldn't have a full blown inquiry because of protocol, so they got around this by calling it a 
"Symposium On Unidentified Flying Objects". The symposium was held in the Raybum Building on 
July 29, 1968. Congressman Roush was the chairman and the list of speakers read like a who's who of 
extraterrestrial hypothesis proponents. I've never seen such a stacked deck in all of my life and the 
statements and papers presented by these learned gentlemen of science proved the point. Not one of 
them presented anything significant, or a plan which was worthwhile in pursuing. These high-brow 
doctors with all their university rhetoric fell flat on their asses and all their high sounding verbiage 
barely cause a ripple. The newspaper copy which was given to the symposium was practically nil, 
however, the exposure of these learned gentlemen before such a distinguished congressional group 
must have been very self-satisfying. I ask, however, who paid for this worthless symposium where the 



64 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



absence of Air Force personnel was so noticeable? As a matter of interest, Congressman Roush was 
defeated for re-election in November of 1968 and was replaced by Congressman Adair. 

Dr. McDonald is still around, but I'm not exactly sure what his position on the UFO 
phenomena is these days. I haven't seen his name in the newspapers for the past six months, however, 
newspaper copy on UFO's during this period has been practically nil. I don't dislike McDonald, it's 
just that he and I have different points of view towards the UFO phenomena. I consider it a lot of 
nonsense and he considers it a worthy scientific problem. Even though I haven't earned a Ph.D. 
degree, I predict that my philosophy will survive the tests and his will go the way of the tube. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 65 



PROJECT BLUE BOOK'S SCIENTIFIC CONSULTANT 



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Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



In the beginning there was a consultant and he stayed almost to the very end. The consultant's 
name was J. Allen Hynek, who is presently the chairman of the Dearborn Observatory at Northeastern 
University. 

First of all, let me clarify one point which I think is very important. Doctor Hynek was Project 
Blue Book's consultant and not, an Air Force consultant. I bring this out because too frequently the 
news media has depicted Doctor Hynek as an Air Force consultant and this is totally in error. The Air 
Force has never asked Dr. Hynek to be its Unidentified Flying Object consultant. The truth of the 
matter is that the Air Force has never had a UFO consultant. Special Ad Hoc groups have been 
appointed to look into Project Blue Book, but that was the extent of their consulting. Doctor Hynek 
was paid by funds allocated to the Foreign Technology Division and his contract was negotiable every 
year. 

The records do not precisely indicate it, however, available correspondence does indicate that 
Dr. Hynek helped Capt. Robert R. Sneider and Lt. Smith evaluate astronomical cases for the "Sign" 
and "Grudge" reports. He also helped Capt. Edward J. Ruppelt evaluate cases for Special Report #14 
and it was during this period that Hynek became Project Blue Book's consultant. Ruppelt was the 
project officer from March of 1951 through September of 1953. In the beginning, Dr. Hynek's primary 
responsibility was to evaluate astronomical cases which were referred to him. Some place along the 
line, more responsibility was given to him than the contract called for. 

I have never been satisfied with the idea that Project Blue Book should have a single paid 
consultant. I prefer the multi-scientist-consultant concept on an on-call basis. After all, Dr. Hynek's 
expertise is limited and his knowledge is mostly general, therefore he could not be expected to 
perform specialized services. He could not compete with Dr. Charles P. Olivier (meteors), Dr. Donald 
Menzel (inversions, parhelia), Dr. Charles H. Smiley (astronomy), Dr. William Kellog, (meteorology), 
Dr. Carl Sagan (theory of galactic civilizations), Dr. Edward U. Condon (spectography), Dr. Brian 
O'Brien (optics), and this list could go on and on. Dr. Olivier, Dr. Menzel, Dr. Smiley, and Dr. Sagan 
have helped the project on specific cases and none of these gentlemen have charged the Project one 
cent for their sacrifices. I have never had an occasion to contact Dr. Kellog, Dr. Condon, and Dr. 
O'Brien on any specific UFO cases, however, I am sure that all of these gentlemen would have offered 
their services to solve a difficult problem. Dr. Hynek is not considered an expert in any of these 
scientific disciplines and yet all of them have been used from time to time in evaluating UFO reports. 

THE POLARIZATION BEGINS 

I had never heard of Doctor J. Allen Hynek prior to my assignment as the Project Blue Book 
officer. My predecessor, Lt. Col. Robert J. Friend, introduced me to Dr. Hynek in July 1963. I'll have 
to admit that I was awed and impressed the first time that I met Dr. Hynek, however, that feeling 
diminished proportionally with the number of contacts I had with the good doctor. First of all, let me 
impress you with the fact that I was in charge of the Project and therefore, had to answer to my 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



67 



Commander, the Vice-Commander, the Chief Scientist, the Air Force Systems Command, and 
numerous people in the Pentagon for the operation of the Program. My ass was in a sling and on a 
number of occasions, because of Hynek's flare for publicity and off-hand remarks, it was bent all out 
of shape. I was called to task, much more often to answer for his remarks and comments, than I was to 
answer for mine. Prior to April, 1964, I had very little trouble with Hynek. He complained to me that 
Dave Moody was not treating him according to his scientific stature or some crap like that. I talked to 
Dave about it the first couple of times and Dave would come back that he was too busy to baby sit or 
kiss the Doctor's ass and that if he would get busy and evaluate the cases that were referred to him, 
that he wouldn't have time to worry about scientific stature. Dr. Hynek and Dave had a thing going 
and I decided to study it. After I analyzed the situation, I had to agree with Dave. Dr. Hynek would 
come into the office and he would spend the first couple of hours socializing or gossiping or telling us 
a lot of nonsense about who was writing books, articles, etc. It was during one of these distracting 
sessions that I raised my voice and asked Dr. Hynek to confine his visit to case studies and let the rest 
of the staff proceed with their work. 

Our philosophy as to how the program should be administered differed and we began to 
polarize during the Socorro sighting. I wanted publicity kept at a low key until we could finish the 
investigation, but he managed to stir up a hornet's nest by making irrelevant remarks. During the first 
few days of the investigation, the telephone lines to my office were backed up for forty minutes and 
the lines to the base were backed up for ten or fifteen minutes. By this time the switchboard operators 
were wishing that I'd move my base of operation to Venus or Mars. They were really very nice and 
sympathetic, but it created chaos for them on a number of occasions. Sending Hynek to investigate the 
Socorro incident was my mistake and I began to regret it almost immediately. His part of the 
investigation didn't add anything significant to the overall report, however, he was now in the national 
lime-light and he managed to stay there for quite awhile, because the news media depicted him as the 
"expert UFO Air Force consultant". This prestigious title gained him publicity and recognition which 
he couldn't possibly get as the chairman of the Dearborn Observatory. Up to this time, Hynek had 
taken a fairly stable stand with regards to UFO's and the associated phenomena. As the wind changed 
the desert, so Hynek began to change and I never knew what was coming next. He embarrassed me 
and the Air Force on a number of occasions; but I kept my cool in public, and wasted no words with 
him in private. Time and time again I asked him to clarify his comments and remarks and all I'd get 
would be a weasel word explanation. I had become concerned because at times I couldn't believe what 
I read in print. For example: In April, 1966, Dr. Hynek stated before the House Armed Services 
Committee that he had twenty cases which he had "certified as well reported" and was unable to 
explain. In a letter to Science Magazine of October 21, 1966, he stated that, "I have in my files several 
hundred reports which are real brain teasers and could easily be made the subject of profitable 
discussion among physical and social scientists alike". In the December 17, 1966 article of the 
Saturday Post, Dr. Hynek stated, "of the 15,000 cases that have come to my attention, several hundred 
are puzzling, and some of the puzzling incidents perhaps one in twenty-five, are bewildering". 
According to my calculations, this would come to about sixty cases. I'm not surprised at this 
statement, some of the cases that were puzzling to him were not at all puzzling to me, Dave Moody, 



68 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Bill Marley, or Dr. Menzel. The Post article, which was by-lined by "J. Allen Hynek" was captioned 
as follows: "For years the Air Force has dismissed them as hoaxes, hallucinations, or 
misidentifications. Now the Air Forces' own scientific consultant on Unidentified Flying Objects 
declares that many of the sightings cannot be so easily explained." I would like to reiterate that Dr. 
Hynek was never the Air Force's consultant on UFO's. Dr. Hynek wrote an article for Playboy 
Magazines and his title was "The UFO Gap". The magazines caption for this article was as follows: 
"America's leading ufologist-just back from an international astronomer's conference behind the iron 
curtain warns that a new Soviet investigative approach could cost us the race to solve the flying-saucer 
riddle." This prognostication, just like all the others he made throughout the years, fell flat on its ass 
because the Soviets weren't interested in flying saucers. They didn't believe in them as a threat or a 
phenomena. I had been getting queries about his unresolved figures from scientific members and also 
from the news media, so for the record I wrote a memo and asked Dr. Hynek to identify those cases 
which he considered unresolved and also to identify the number; was it twenty, sixty, one hundred, or 
one thousand? Also, would he identify how many of these were Air Force cases and how many were 
from his own personal file. Just after I had written the memo, I received a block-buster through the 
mail. The January-February, 1968, issue of the UFO Investigator had just been disseminated through 
the mail and the front page caption read as follows: "Surprise Warnings: In a courageous new 
declaration, Dr. J. Allen Hynek- Air Force Chief Scientific consultant on UFO's has made this 
surprising disclosure: If the Colorado Project's conclusion is completely negative -denying UFO 
reality-he will take the wraps off his personal files of good unexplained cases and make them public." 
Once again, he was depicted as the Air Force consultant, which he was not. I make a point of this, 
because I called this to his attention on numerous occasions, but each time he would advise me that it 
was the news media who was at fault and not him. Just for the record I never believed him and I 
always expressed dismay and surprise at such inaccuracies by the news media. As I said before, I had 
to make excuses for his remarks and comments, but they always turned out to be a "misquote". Right 
after his bomb in the UFO bulletin, I asked for an official position on his unresolved cases. The 
Pentagon had now become involved in the figure controversy, so Dr. Hynek' s reply had to be 
addressed to the FTD Chief Scientist. I submit Dr. Hynek' s letter to Dr. Cacioppo in its entirety. 



NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY 
Evanston, Illinois 60201 



Department of Astronomy 
Dr. A. Cacioppo: 



Lindheimer Astronomical Research Center 



27 February 1968 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



69 



I understand that some remarks I have made in the past relative to the number of unsolved 
cases in the Air Force files and in my personal files have caused some concern and that a 
clarification has been requested. In particular, references have been made to my statement 
before the House Armed Services Committee where I said that I had 20 good cases that I 
couldn't explain. Apparently at other times, I may have used a somewhat different figure, 
although I do not recollect at the moment in what context. Nonetheless, the misunderstanding 
occurs solely because the absence of the word "only" has not been noted. I picked "20" more 
or less out of the air; I could just as well have said 40 or 50, or perhaps even a hundred. After 
all, I could have said several hundred since in the Air Force statistics themselves there are 
listed well over 600 cases that are unidentified. But if I have 600 cases then I also have 20 in a 
sense that a man who has $100 certainly has $3.00. 

As one increases the number of stated "unknowns" one necessarily reduces their "quality". 
When I said 20 I was thinking of the very best, and most puzzling and best documented cases. 
When one says that there are several hundred unknown cases, one must necessarily include a 
number of "one-witness" cases and of cases which have not, because of lack of funds and staff, 
been adequately investigated. 

If we want a number, for the sake of having a number, I think we might settle on 50 as a 
number which I could support. This would include some one-witness, but in all cases it would 
represent articulate reports, reasonably well -documented, and from witnesses whose reliability 
there is no overt reason to question. 

I hope this sets the matter straight and I am sorry to have caused confusion by perhaps stating 
different numbers at different times. I might call attention to the fact that in just the 1966 cases 
officially submitted to the Air Force, there are 32 cases which are classified as "unidentified". 
Many of these, however, have not been adequately investigated in my opinion, and might not 
remain unidentified if thorough treatment had been accorded them. I hope this helps to clear up 
this little bit of confusion. 

Sincerely Yours, 
J. Allen Hynek 

JAH:lp 

Cc: Major Hector Quintanilla 
John J. Sweeney 

I am not going to comment on Dr. Hynek's reply to Dr. Cacioppo's letter except to say I'm 
sure glad I didn't waste all those years getting a Ph.D. so I could write letters which make statements 
such as, "If I have 600 cases, then I also have 20 in the sense that a man who has $100.00 certainly has 
$3.00." If you don't recognize this as a bunch of bull-shit, then you and I didn't go to the same school 
together. Dr. Cacioppo, myself, and the Pentagon didn't accept his reply as a valid explanation and as 
far as I know that is the way it stands today. Dave Moody was right, "Bull shit is bull shit no matter 
who slings it". Dave was an old Navy Swabee and he could recognize it from a long way off. 

A head-on confrontation between Dr. Hynek and it was apparent and after the Congressional 
hearing I was never to trust him again. It came to my attention that on a number of occasions he tried 
to undermine my official position. Somewhere in the Pentagon, there is a letter addressed to Dr. 
Harold Brown, Secretary of the Air Force, in which D. Hynek recommended that Major Hector 
Quintanilla Jr., Chief of Project Blue Book, be replaced by Lt. Col. Robert J. Friend, my predecessor. I 
have a copy of Dr. Brown's reply to Dr. Hynek, it was dated February 7, 1967. Dr. Brown expressed 



70 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



satisfaction with my work and the following year I received two letters of Commendation, one from 
General LeBailley and one from General Giller. Dr. Hynek is a prolific letter writer and again wrote to 
Dr. Brown on May 25, 1967. Hynek sent me a courtesy copy of this letter and in it he suggests that an 
independent civilian scientific backup group be established to help Blue Book. He stated that such a 
group could "take the monkey off the Air Force's back". The rest of his letter is a bunch of crap. He 
predicts embarrassment and due consequences for the Air Force. He used to predict such consequences 
at least once each year and I must admit that as a prognosticator he batted exactly zero. Dr. Hynek' s 
letter to Dr. Brown is typical of the way he operates. Dr. Brown had already announced that the Air 
Force was looking for a University to undertake a scientific study of the UFO phenomena, so Hynek 
recommends something which was already in the mill. Actually, what Hynek was hoping to do was 
impress Dr. Brown and then have Northwestern University selected as the lead University in the 
forthcoming UFO study. Hynek wanted to direct the study group and the only way he could do this 
was to have Northwestern University selected as the lead University. Hynek had asked me and Sara 
Hunt of SAFOI to put in a plug for Northwestern, however, both of us kept quiet and then watched his 
political maneuverings go down the tube. Northwestern was never in the running. In the summer of 
1966, Dr. Hynek appeared in a talk show in New York and someone in the audience asked him about 
our file system. Our file system was manual and the cases were filed by date, month, and year. The 
case reports were cross-indexed and we could usually retrieve a case within a matter of two or three 
minutes. There was nothing magic about it and it worked for us. When Hynek came back from his trip 
to the east, he told me how dismayed this individual was that our case files were not mechanized. He 
suggested that we mechanize the sighting information. I told him that I didn't think the expense 
justified the end results. I wasn't at all impressed with his rhetoric on how he could manipulate the 
information and what grand and glorious things he could find. He wasn't satisfied with my attitude, so 
he took his case to the Pentagon. The Pentagon sent the recommendation back to me and I told them 
that for our purposes we didn't need machine files. The Pentagon decided to ask Hynek for an 
unsolicited proposal and if it was acceptable it would be funded by FTD. They got a proposal and it 
was a beauty. I laughed like hell when I saw the price tag. To mechanize the files, it would cost FTD 
in excess of a quarter of a million dollars. This price did not include the cost of maintaining the files 
after they were mechanized. Needless to say, saner minds prevailed and automating the files became a 
dead issue. I'll have to admit that I was biased from the beginning and I really never gave it serious 
consideration. Mechanizing the files meant more people and I wasn't interested in building a 
monumental empire. 

1966 was the year which convinced me that Dr. Hynek had lost his usefulness to the project. I 
decided to keep his services to a minimum and use him only when it was absolutely necessary. It was 
during this period that I decided to start referring mostly Astronomical cases to him. This way I could 
save some of my resources for the unexpected which always seemed to occur in the spring and 
summer. I also decided to curtail his frequent visits to Wright-Patterson in 1967, because the budget 
was getting tight. I managed to do both of these successfully, but Dr. Hynek didn't like it at all, 
although we could accomplish the same amount of case studies on a selected basis. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



71 



In October of 1966, the University of Colorado was awarded a contract to study the UFO 
phenomena and Dr. Hynek was very disappointed because he was not included in their plans. He 
asked me if he could visit the University of Colorado and talk to them about their study, I wrote him a 
letter and asked him not to go to the University unless he was invited. Although I had written him a 
letter asking him to stay away from the Colorado study group, it didn't bother him any; because he 
went to Denver and met with two members of the study group and Dr. James McDonald. He paid for 
his trip out of his own private funds. 

An underground movement to discredit the Colorado study was afoot and I'm happy to report 
that it fell flat on its ass. That group could never muster enough support to do any serious damage, 
however, various members did spread out throughout the country to preach their philosophy. It was 
never a popular movement among scientists, although one of their members did brag that many, many 
scientists supported them. I never believed him. If that had been true, the pressure would have reached 
the top and I would have felt it at my level, but I never did. 

Dr. Hynek was interested in the Colorado groups operation from the very beginning. He 
actually wanted to be an integral part of the group, but this would have brought in a member with a 
pre-conceived philosophy of the UFO phenomena. For this reason I tried to keep Dr. Hynek away 
from the Colorado group while they were conducting their study. I didn't like to make a federal case 
out of it, I just wanted to restrain him, so that they could organize their own investigative techniques 
and at the same time make their own evaluation. I succeeded to a certain extent, however, at the 
beginning he did conduct a couple of investigations with the group when they invited him to do so. 
One of the reasons the group asked him to lead a couple of investigations was to learn of his 
technique. I didn't interfere, because his technique consisted of talking to witnesses and that is about 
the extent of his technique. He would come back with all the taped diabgue, or his notes, and we 
would do all the spade work. In a number of articles which he has written he has mentioned that the 
Air Force did not give certain cases the "FBI" treatment. To me, his statements were just a bunch of 
mumbled words, uttered for the benefit of a receptive audience. He never did submit to me a complete 
investigative report; a repot in which all details were checked and verified. Anybody can collect 
information from a witness, however, try checking and verifying that information and that is where the 
real work comes in. The Air Force didn't give UFO cases the alleged "FBI" treatment (whatever that 
means), however, we took great pains in verifying the information, the activity, and in making an 
honest effort to determine what type of stimulus caused the observer to report a UFO. I don't think the 
Condon Committee ever found out what the "FBI" treatment was either, because I don't remember 
them mentioning it in their report. 

THE TERMINATION 

The hand- writing for terminating Dr. Hynek' s contract was on the wall since as far back as the 
middle of 1966. I had become convinced that Hynek's association with Project Blue Book was no 
longer an asset, it had for all practical purposes become a liability. I had given Hynek a free hand in 
conducting the investigation at Dexter, Michigan, and I was very distressed and extremely dissatisfied 



72 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



with his formal report. It was not a report that you would normally expect to get from a scientist. I 
would classify it as sophomoric, incomplete, and inconclusive. Hynek's statement before the 
congressional hearing further convinced me that he was more interested in other aspects of the UFO 
phenomena. His interest certainly was not the Air Force UFO program or the scientific aspects of the 
UFO. His public statements are replete with remarks about the magnitude of the UFO problem. The 
incident which convinced me that Dr. Hynek was a liability took place on April 17, 1966. Early in the 
morning of April 17, Deputy Sheriff Dale Spaur and W.L. Neff chased a large domed object, fifty feet 
across and maybe seventy feet high. The object was purplish- white in color and it was headed towards 
the east. Spaur and Neff took off after the object and chased it for eight-six miles all the way from the 
vicinity of Ravenna, Ohio, to the Pennsylvania border. At times, the speed of their police car exceeded 
one hundred miles per hour. The Ohio papers carried this story for days. The day after the story hit the 
papers I got in touch with Spaur, Neff, and the police chief of Mantua. I asked them straight-forward 
questions and they gave me straight-forward answers. I had already began to check with my positive 
sources. I checked all balloon launchings for western and northern Ohio. I checked all radar stations in 
northern Ohio for any unusual or experimental airborne vehicles. I checked with Holloman for any 
super pressure balloon activity in Ohio. I checked the Pentagon for any classified activity, the Space 
Detection Center for satellites, and the forest rangers for any help they might be able to give me. 
Everything that I checked was negative except for satellites and the astronomical charts. There were 
three visible satellites at the time when Spaur first sighted his saucer-shaped craft rising from out of 
the tree line. The planet Venus was also prominently visible in the east. Spaur and Neff never caught 
the object, it zoomed off into the sky as daylight approached. This sighting received more than its 
share of publicity and the newspapers around Ravenna ran a series of articles on UFO's. The interest 
was high because the gentlemen involved were police officers. This type of situation is extremely 
ticklish, because you always have a loser. It's a shame that it has to be this way, but it happens to be a 
fact of life. Dale Spaur, the newspaper, NICAP, and the sheriff didn't like my evaluation. They exerted 
pressure on Congressman Stanton and he in turn exerted pressure on the Pentagon. Congressman 
Stanton wanted me to re-investigate the case, so I drove up to the Portage County courthouse for my 
interview with Spaur and Neff. The minute I walked into the sheriff's office I could feel a sense of 
futility. Waiting from me to arrive was Carol Clapp of the Record Courier , two members of NICAP, 
plus the sheriff. I was to conduct my interview in front of all these people and this was the wrong 
approach. I concluded my interview and I wasn't at all happy. There were a number of inconsistencies 
in my second interview, but I could understand this and it really didn't alter my original evaluation. 
Spaur had been talking to everybody that would listen to him and inconsistencies are going to crop up 
under this type of atmosphere. Spaur had told me that a few days after he had chased the original 
object, he had spotted it again while making his rounds at about nine o'clock at night. He told me that 
he had nicknamed it "Floyd". I drove back to Wright-Patterson with an ominous feeling. I didn't like 
what was happening to Dale Spaur and yet I was powerless to help him. I called the Pentagon and told 
them that I didn't find any new evidence which would change my original evaluation. Someone made 
the remark that Congressman Stanton wasn't going to like it and that statement proved to be true. I had 
hoped that the publicity on the case would die down, but the Record Courier had a good thing going 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



73 



and they milked it dry. Also, NICAP was very active around Ravenna and they weren't about to let it 
die. It has been my experience in cases like this, that the longer publicity drags it out, the worse the 
principal witness gets hurt. This is exactly what happened to Dale Spaur. A few months after his 
encounter with the UFO, his life was a disaster. Dale Spaur would never be the same man again. He 
lost his job, his family, his friends, and he found very little respect among his neighbors. The 
proponents of extraterrestrial visitation had used Dale Spaur and he wasn't aware of it. When Dr. 
James E. McDonald visited the Project office in June of 1966, he asked me to reconsider Dale Spaur' s 
case and to place it in the "unidentified" category. Because McDonald was a scientist, I decided out of 
courtesy to him, to send Dr. Hynek the case file on Spaur' s sighting and I asked I him for his advice. I 
also sent Dr. Hynek NICAP' s report on the sighting. A few days later, he replied that he had not 
personally investigated the sighting, therefore, he was reluctant to give me an evaluation. This struck 
me as funny, because he frequently evaluated case files without conducting a personal investigation. I 
knew what the problem was, Carol Clapp and Dr. McDonald were applying pressure and he wasn't 
about to get caught in the middle. The thing that really drove me up the wall was when he advised me 
to change my evaluation because the case was "politically hot". He reasoned that a policeman, a 
Congressman, a professor, a reporter, the biggest hobby club in the United States were all involved 
and if I didn't change my evaluation they would make life miserable for me. They did make life 
miserable for me, but I never did change the evaluation. I would have changed the evaluation on 
scientific merit, but not because of political pressure. Dr. Hynek' s political advice convinced me that I 
really didn't need him as a scientific consultant. 

I was in favor of replacing him with four or five consultants; all experts in their scientific 
fields. I drew up such a list, however, it was never made a matter of record, so it really doesn't exist. 
The reason for this is that in the summer of 1966 the Secretary of the Air Force asked the Air Force 
Office of Scientific Research to find a University which would undertake an independent UFO study. 
Although the Pentagon had no control over Hynek, they suggested that the Project keep him in case 
the selected University needed his background experience. Instead of terminating his contract for the 
next three years. The truth of the matter is that Hynek' s contract was renewed in the summer of 1968 
for 1969, because the University study was late and would not be completed on schedule. Had the 
University study been on time, then Hynek' s contract would not have been renewed for fiscal year 
1969. Dr. Hynek' s contract was renewable every fiscal year, so no June 30, 1969, his old contract 
lapsed and a new one was not drawn up. That is how Project Blue Book lost its consultant. It's ironical 
that in 1966 Dr. Hynek recommended that I be replaced and in the end I held the option whether to 
retain him or get rid of him. I didn't wish to retain him, so I just never invited him back. The 
termination of Dr. Hynek' s contract saved the Foreign Technology Division a few thousand dollars 
every year. Hynek had been well paid for his services as a UFO consultant. 



74 Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



A PLAN TO END CONTROVERSY ONLY CREATES MORE OF THE SAME 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



75 



THE SEARCH FOR A UNIVERSITY 



You would think that finding a University to undertake an independent study of the UFO 
phenomena would be easy, but exactly the opposite proved to be true. The only university that was 
really eager to undertake such a study was Northwestern University and this would have placed Dr. J. 
Allen Hynek as the Director of the Project. It was the Air Force's intent to have impartial scientists 
from reputable universities study the UFO phenomena independently and with complete freedom. 
Those universities which had members on their staff who had pablicly expressed strong opinions 
regarding UFO's would be excluded. This automatically excluded Northwestern University (Dr. J. 
Allen Hynek), the University of Arizona (Dr. James E. McDonald), and Harvard University (Dr. 
Donald Menzel). The philosophies and views of these three gentlemen were well-known and the Air 
Force wished to avoid controversy from all sides. There were numerous capable Universities 
throughout the country and the following were discussed and given consideration at the preliminary 
meetings. 



There were and are universities that are aware of the UFO phenomena and will not have 
anything to do with the Program under any circumstances. Some university presidents were not 
willing to get involved with the UFO's and would not even discuss the subject. This, I might add, was 
the typical reaction and the burden of convincing university presidents to discuss and undertake the 
UFO study was carried by a young broad-shouldered doctor by the name of J. Thomas Ratchford. Dr. 
Ratchford was a project scientist in the Solid State Sciences Division when he was given the task of 
selling the program to a reputable university. What the Air Force was trying to accomplish was simple 
and straight-forward. The following is an extract of the original proposal: 

The objective of the research is to significantly advance understanding of phenomena relating 
to UFO through an interdisciplinary investigation of a wide spectrum of outstanding scientists. 
The decision to strengthen scientific investigations of UFO's was based on a recommendation 
by the A.F. Scientific Advisory Board, which reviewed the resources, methods, and findings of 
Project Blue Book, the Air Force's program to investigate and evaluate UFO reports. 



Rensselaer, Troy N.Y 
Columbia 

New York University 

Yale 

Cornell 

University of Dayton 
Carnegie Tech 
Utah 

Colorado 
Wisconsin 
Chicago 
UCLA 



Washington 
Rice 

University of Texas 

Vanderbilt 

Duke 

University of Florida 
Georgia Tech 
University of Georgia 
Iowa 
Illinois 

University of California 
Oregon 



76 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Air Force objectives in awarding the contract are to obtain (1) a thorough, independent, and 
objective scientific investigation performed by scientists of the highest competence in research, 
associated with research organizations of established reputation and possessing the required 
scientific resources, (2) a full and public report of such an investigation and, (3) 
recommendations as to what the Air Force should do with regards to UFO reports and Project 
Blue Book in the future. 

The Air Force will provide the principal investigator with all records of reported UFO 
sightings and their evaluation by the Air Force. Project Blue Book files are available in their 
entirety. No approval will be required by the Air Force for release of information concerning 
the investigation, and the university will be the source of information concerning the program 
and findings under the study. 

Dr. Ratchford did a lot of traveling across the country before he was able to get a favorable 
response. The University of Colorado was interested, if Dr. Edward U. Condon could direct the 
project. It was a windfall for the Air Force and a triumph for Dr. Ratchford. It was perfect, it was 
beautiful, and as far as I was concerned, it could not be surpassed. The research facilities around 
Boulder are fantastic, easily accessible, and the University could draw on available talents if they were 
needed. In Dr. Condon, we had an accomplished administrator, a patriotic scientist who had worked 
on the Manhattan Proje ct, a former director of the National Bureau of Standards, a former director of 
Research for Corning Glass Works, and presently a professor of Physics and a Fellow of the Joint 
Institute for Laboratory Astrophysics, University of Colorado. Dr. E. U. Condon's vitae is two pages 
long. When I heard of our windfall, I was elated, I couldn't believe our luck. We'd finally gotten 
someone to study this alleged problem. Dr. Condon has a reputation for being a no nonsense guy, so 
we had really hit pay dirt. It was touch and go for about five or six weeks, but Tom Ratchford kept on 
top of the situation, made a number of trips to Colorado, and in the end the University of Colorado 
agreed to negotiate. 

THE UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO ACCEPTS 

When the University of Colorado agreed to work towards meeting the Air Force objectives of 
the study, Secretary Brown made the decision to award the contract to them. He requested that the 
office of Assistant Secretary of Defense (Public Affairs) issue a news release to that effect. I am 
inserting the original news release in its entirety because I have seen different and capsule versions of 
this announcement. 

IMMEDIATE RELEASE October 7, 1966 NO. 847-66 

OXford 7-5131 (Info) 
OXford 7-3189 (Copies) 

AIR FORCE SELECTS UNIVERSITY OF COLORADO 
TO INVESTIGATE UNIDENTIFIED FLYING OBJECT REPORTS 

The University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, has been selected by the Air Force to 
conduct independent investigations into unidentified flying object (UFO) reports. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



77 



A research agreement, valued at approximately $300,000 is being negotiated with the 
university by the Air Force Office of Scientific Research to analyze phenomena associated 
with UFO sightings and to make recommendations on the Air Force's methods of investigating 
and evaluating UFO reports — a program know as Project Blue Book. A report is expected to 
be made to the Air Force in early 1969. 

Dr. Edward U. Condon will direct the scientific phases of the work, while Robert J. 
Low will serve as project coordinator. Principal investigators working with Dr. Condon will be 
Franklin E. Roach and Dr. Stuart W. Cook. 

Dr. Condon, former director of the National Bureau of Standards (NBS), is a 
professor of physics at Colorado and a fellow of the Joint Laboratory for Astrophysics which is 
co-sponsored by the university and NBS. Mr. Low is an assistant dean of the university's 
graduate school. Dr. Cook is chair man of the university's psychology department, and Dr. 
Roach is an astrophysicist with the Environmental Science Services Administration. 

Colorado is expected to select several other universities to take part in the research. 
These and other consultants will bring the number of scientists involved to over 100. 

The National Academy of Sciences has indicated its willingness to assist by 
appointing a panel — at the time the Colorado report becomes available to the Air Force — to 
review the investigating team's work. This panel will not be part of the investigating team, but 
will provide a further independent check on the scientific validity of the method of 
investigation. 

In announcing the selection, Air Force Secretary Harold Brown said, "We are more 
than pleased to be able to place this grant with respected individuals in a university of such 
high standing in the scientific community. Additionally, the location of the university should 
prove invaluable to the investigators, since the National Center for Atmospheric Research and 
the research headquarters of the Environmental Science Services Administration are located at 
Boulder. These organizations conduct research on the properties of man's natural environment, 
specializing in the physical characteristics of the atmosphere and the near-space medium." 

Air Force Project Blue Book files, as well as any other UFO information in 
possession of the Air Force, will be made available to the team. Additionally, all Air Force 
installations within the U.S. will assist the team if requested. The investigators will, however, 
conduct their research independently of and without direction from the Air Force. 

The decision to enter into a research agreement for this work was based on a 
recommendation of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board which completed a review of the 
resources, methods, and findings of Project Blue Book earlier this year. While complimenting 
the air Force on the organization of Project Blue Book, the Board recommended that the 
program be expanded to include investigation of selected sightings by independent scientists. 

Within the Department of Defense, the Air Force has the responsibility of 
investigating UFO reports. The Air Force has been investigating such reports since 1948 under 
its role of air defense of the United States, and the responsibilities of receiving, investigating, 
and evaluating UFO reports. 

END 

(DOD Release No. 388-66, May 9, 1966, refers.) 



DR. E.U. CONDON 

As soon as Dr. Condon and Bob Low had organized a nucleus of working investigators and 
evaluators, they requested a briefing from Project Blue Book. The briefing took place at the University 
of Colorado on November 21, 1966. My assistant, 1 st Lt. William F. Marley, Jr., and I briefed the 
Condon Committee on the Status of the Project. I discussed the chronological history of the UFO 
program since its inauguration, while Lt. Marley discussed the status of current UFO cases. After our 
presentations there were many questions that we answered for the Committee. By the way, Lt. Marley 



78 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



was a metallurgist and a graduate of Virginia Military Institute. I stole him from one of the other 
sections and he turned out to be a cotton-picking gem. I made an observation of the University group 
and I inserted it in my trip report. It went as follows: "It became apparent that the University group 
was extremely naive with regards to the complexity of the UFO program, however, the learning cycle 
for these gentlemen should be quite rapid and they should be productive within a short period of time." 
My observation turned out to be correct, because by January 1967, the group was well versed on the 
complexity and enormity of the problem. I could sense this by the questions which the group was now 
asking the Project Office. I returned to the University of Colorado on January 18, 1967. Dr. Condon 
wanted another briefing and this time I left Lt. Marley behind to take care of the shop. If I needed 
anything, I could pick up the phone and get Bill to send it to me right away. Everything went along 
fine and our discussions were fruitful, but I got a slight jolt at an evening cocktail party. I had been 
invited to a party given in honor of the attendees to the "Fluid Mechanics" symposium. I was wearing 
my uniform because I was on temporary duty; so I was very conspicuous. The jolt came, when a 
number of these learned gentlemen of science came up to me and voiced their opinions with regards to 
Dr. Condon's wisdom in accepting the challenge of the UFO study. Without exception, they expressed 
their concern that Dr. Condon would be hurt no matter what conclusions were reached in the study. 
All of these scientists knew Dr. Condon well and had on some occasions given thought to the UFO 
phenomena. On the way home, I remember saying to myself, "My God, what have you guys done to 
this man who has contributed so much to science." I said those words or something like them on a 
number of other occasions before the study was finished. In the end, Dr. Condon excelled again, and 
rose above his critics and detractors while they feel by the wayside. Charlatans, phonies, and mediocre 
took their turn at undermining him or his efforts but history will judge his study was an honest attempt 
to place an emotional subject in its proper perspective. 

On my second trip to Boulder, I got a treat which I had been looking forward to for a long 
time. I frequently called NORAD for Radar and Space information. I knew my contacts name, but I 
had never met them personally and now my opportunity was right around the corner. Dr. Ratchford 
and Bob Hippler had arranged for NORAD to five Dr. Condon's group a complete briefing. The 
briefing was to run the gamut from Unclassified Material to the very highest security classification. 
The group was met by Major General Oris B. Johnson and after his welcome he turned us over to his 
briefing officers. All of us in the group heard information which we had not heard before and we also 
learned a number of things which none of us will ever be able to discuss. It was a first class eye opener 
and all of us were quite impressed. After the briefings and review of some operational film, we were 
invited to walk through and to talk to the analyst in Cheyenne mountain. This is where the action takes 
place and it's an exciting little hole. The operation is first class and the gentlemen who are manning 
the equipment and looking for the first signs of danger are dedicated people. I personally am very 
proud of them. I was impressed with their computer rigs and their up-date techniques. I was very 
happy with the trip and I was glad that Dr. Ratchford and Col. Hippler had set the meeting up. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



79 



THE COMMITTEE ASKS FOR CASES 

Now that the preliminary discussions were over, the group was ready to get down to serious 
business and study individual cases. Dr. David Saunders made a trip to the Project office and spent 
three days just going through the case files and tagging those cases which the group wanted to study. 
The cases which Saunders tagged were sent to the Base Reproduction Center for duplication. The 
cases were reproduced in their entirety and nothing was left out. On his first trip Dr. Saunders picked 
out about two hundred cases. Later on, Bob Low also made a trip and he tagged a whole stack of 
cases. These were also reproduced and mailed to the Condon group. A good portion of the cases which 
were selected were those cases which at one time or another had received wide -spread publicity in the 
Communications Media. The Condon group was supplied with a list of alleged controversial cases, by 
NICAP and these cases were reproduced for their study. In these particular cases, the Condon group 
had the Air Force file and the NICAP file for their study. This information was coded and mechanized 
for subsequent use. I never saw the NICAP files, however, I do know that the Colorado group did use 
their information in the study. They also used that information which they collected themselves in 
their personal investigations. During this period there was frequent communication between my office 
and Dr. Condon's group. They would ask for certain case files, movies, photos, artifacts, and we 
would supply whatever we had in our possession. We were determined to cooperate with Dr. 
Condon's group and we gave them everything we had and I say that we never kept anything from 
them. I had good rapport with Dr. Condon's group and it lasted for the life of the study. 

DR. CONDON HAS INTERNAL PROBLEMS 

Dr. Condon had some internal personnel problems with three members of his group. I could 
foresee two of his problems, but I was not going to meddle into the internal affairs of Dr. Condon's 
group. I could foresee the trouble just by the type of questions which two members of his group asked. 
I have been asked certain questions so frequently, that instinctively I can tell the line of questions 
which will follow. I remember telling Bill Marley that Dr. Condon was going to have trouble with two 
me3mbers of his staff. I figured that Dr. Condon would have problems because of their personal 
philosophies with regards to UFO's however, this was not the reason they were discharged. Look 
Magazine, in their May 14, 1968 issue, published an article which depicted Dr. Condon as the bad guy 
and the two gentlemen which were discharged from his staff as the good guys. The whole thing was 
played up completely out of proportion to the amount of space it deserved. Dr. James E. McDonald 
supplied Look Magazine with a letter which was extracted from one of the files at the University and 
the author tried to portray that as a conspiracy which had taken place. This was not true and the article 
smelled of nothing but yellow journalism. A couple of congressmen who got excited over any article 
that was pro-UFO, I had expected an avalanche of critical letters, but it never materialized and if I 
remember correctly, I had a total of six letters and the language that was used was nothing like what I 
had expected. SAFOI had also geared itself to answer a whole bunch of angry letters from irate 
citizens, but it never happened. The article never caused the kind of controversy or interest that it was 



80 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



intended to cause. NICAP was elated over the Look article, but what the hell, it didn't take much to 
please them. 

THE COLORADO STUDY GROUP HAD CRITICS 

Dr. Condon's report was not due to be finished until the latter part of 1968, however, as early 
as the spring of 1968 there was a movement to undermine his work. In December, 1967, a small group 
of professors met in Denver, Colorado. My project consultant, Dr. J. Allen Hynek, was part of this 
group. Also, two members of this group belonged to Dr. Condon's staff at the time. Another member 
of this select group was my number one critic, Dr. James E. McDonald from the University of 
Arizona. In the spring of 1968, one of the attendees of this group wrote a letter to Dr. Frederick Seitz, 
President of the National Academy of Sciences, and criticized the Colorado project and their 
forthcoming report. The National Academy of Sciences was the agency which was to review Dr. 
Condon's report. The letter to President Seitz didn't cause a ripple, how in the hell can you comment 
on or criticize a report which hadn't been written or edited. This letter is typical of how the pro- UFO 
groups work. They load up a shotgun with buckshot, fire it, and hope that the spray will hit some 
sensitive spot which will five [sic] their cause some free and biased publicity. At this particular time, 
the UFO critics and hobby clubs were suffering from lack of favorable publicity and they were 
grasping for any events which took place during this time, however, the UFO disciples were busy 
making speeches for a lucrative fee. It was during this time, July 29, 1968, that the Committee on 
Science and Astronautics held their "Symposium on Unidentified Flying Objects". As I said before, 
this symposium was stacked with believers in the extraterrestrial theory. Dr. J. Allen Hynek, my 
consultant, made a statement before this group and the first paragraph is as follows: "My name is J. 
Allen Hynek. I am a professor of Astronomy at Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, where I 
serve as chairman of the department of Astronomy and Director of the Lindheimer Astronomical 
Research Center. I have also served for many years, and still do, as scientific consultant to the U.S. Air 
Force on Unidentified Flying Objects, or UFO's. Today, however, I am speaking as a private citizen 
and scientist and not as a representative of the Air Force". This statement is contained in the 
Congressional document number 97-818, Air Force records indicate that Dr. J. Allen was never a UFO 
consultant for the United States Air Force. He was a UFO consultant to Project Blue Book and he was 
paid from those funds. Dr. Hynek again tried to pass himself off as an Air Force consultant, which is a 
prestigious title that is not deserved by a mere project consultant. 

This period was a busy one for the University of Colorado group. They were busy putting 
their report together and hoping to meet their deadline. It soon became apparent to them that the report 
was too voluminous and that the established deadline was going to have to slip. I was disappointed, 
however, I would rather read a complete comprehensive report, than a shoddy, incomplete, 
meaningless one. Besides, as far as I was concerned, the future of the UFO in America depended a 
great deal in what Dr. Condon had to say and what he found in his study. I had hoped that Dr. Condon 
would finish his report before the new administration took office, but the report was not released to the 
Air Force until the second week of January, 1969. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



81 



THE REPORT GOES DIRECTLY TO THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES 

I had no prior knowledge of the release date of the report until two hours before it arrived in 
Washington, D.C. Dr. Ratchford called me from his office at the Office of Applied Research (OAR) 
and told me that he was on his way to Dulles to pick up the report. Dr. Condon had placed the report 
on a plane in Denver and it was flown direct to Washington. A panel of members from the National 
Academy of Sciences was to convene in Washington to review Dr. Condon's report. I don't think 
anyone in the Air Force knew who the members of the panel were going to be and I don't think it 
really mattered to any of us. We were anxious to read the report and to have the panel review it and 
pass its judgment. The panel completed its review of the report in private and then released its findings 
to the public and to the Air Force. The members of the review panel were as follows: 

Gerald M. Clemence, Chairman 
Yale University 

H.R. Crane 

University of Michigan 

David M. Dennison 
University of Michigan 

Wallace C. Fenn 
University of Rochester 

H. Keffer Hartline 

The Rockefeller University 

E.R. Hilgard 
Stanford University 

Mark Kac 

The Rockefeller University 

Francis W. Reichelderfer 
Washington, D.C. 

William W. Rubey 

University of California at Los Angeles 

CD. Shane 

Santa Cruz, California 

Oswald G. Villard, Jr. 
Stanford University 

SAFOI had decided to release the complete report and the comments from the National Academy of 
Sciences on January 9, 1969. The information was to be released to all the communications media at 
the same time. Somehow, the New York Times released the information a few hours before the rest of 
the communications media and that e where I got my information with regards to the findings and 
conclusions of the report. I didn't get the complete report of the National Academy of Sciences 
comments until two days later. 



82 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



The National Academy of Sciences comments were directed to the Honorable Alexander A. 
Flax, Assistant Secretary of the Air Force. The cover letter was signed by Dr. Frederic Seitz, President 
of the National Academy of Sciences and it contained the following pertinent remarks. 

As you know, a final draft of this report was made available to the panel on November 15, 
1968. Under the chairmanship of Dr. Gerald Clemence the panel has devoted substantial time 
and effort to a careful review of the scope, methodology, and findings, of the Colorado study 
group and has prepared and unanimously approved the attached report, which I am pleased to 
transmit on behalf of the panel. 

The Academy accepted this task because of its belief in the importance of making available to 
the government and the public a careful assessment of the scientific significance of UFO 
phenomena which have been variously interpreted both in this country and abroad. 

Substantial questions have been raised as to the adequacy of our research and investigation 
programs to explain or to determine the nature of these sometimes puzzling reports of observed 
phenomena. It is my hope that the Colorado report, together with our panel review, will be 
helpful to you and other responsible officials in determining the nature and scope of any 
continuing research effort in this area. 

Finally, may I add that the report of the reviewing panel was prepared and is being made 
available for the sole purpose of assisting the government in reaching a decision on its future 
course of action. Its use in whole or in part for any other purpose would be incompatible with 
the purpose of the review and the conditions under which it was conducted. 

From the very beginning, Secretary Brown had insisted that any independent study of the UFO 
phenomena be reviewed by the National Academy of Sciences. Dr. Condon had accepted this from the 
beginning and if the Academy had refused to review the report, then he would never have undertaken 
the project. The Academy panel had been charged with the responsibility of providing an independent 
assessment of the scope, methodology, and findings of the University of Colorado study. In order for 
the panel to accomplish its task, they found it necessary to familiarize themselves with various 
scientific points of view which had been presented in a number of publications, reports, papers, and 
documents. In their review of the Colorado study, the panel substantially agreed with the report's 
conclusions and findings. The reports conclusions, findings, and recommendations are as follows: 

Section I 

Conclusions and Recommendations 
Edward U. Condon 

We believe that the existing record and the results of the Scientific Study of 
Unidentified Flying Objects of the University of Colorado, which are presented in detail in 
subsequent sections of this report, support the conclusions and recommendations which follow. 

As indicated by its title, the emphasis of this study had been in attempting to learn 
from UFO reports anything that could be considered as adding to scientific knowledge. Our 
general conclusion is that nothing had come from the study of UFO' s in the past 21 years that 
has added to scientific knowledge. Careful consideration of the record as it is available to us 
leads us to conclude that further extensive study of UFO's probably cannot be justified in the 
expectation that science will be advanced thereby. 

It has been argued that this lack of contribution to science is due to the fact that very 
little scientific effort has been put on the subject. We do not agree. We feel that the reason that 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



there has been very little scientific study of the subject is that those scientists who are most 
directly concerned, astronomers, atmospheric physicists, chemists, and psychologists, having 
had ample opportunity to look into the matter, have individually decided that UFO phenomena 
do not offer a fruitful field in which to look for major scientific discoveries. 

This conclusion is so important, and the public seems in general to have so little 
understanding of how scientists work, that some more comment on it seems desirable. Each 
person who sets out to make a career of scientific research, chooses a general field of broad 
specialization in which to acquire proficiency. Within that field he looks for specific fields in 
which to work. To do this he keeps abreast of the published scientific literature, attends 
scientific meetings, where reports on current progress are given, and energetically discusses his 
interests and those of his colleagues both face-to-face and by correspondence with them. He is 
motivated by an active curiosity about nature and by a personal desire to make a contribution 
to science. He is constantly probing for error and incompleteness in the efforts that have been 
made in his fields of interest, and looking for new ideas about new ways to attack new 
problems. From this effort he arrives at personal decisions as to where his own effort can be 
most fruitful. These decisions are personal in the sense that he must estimate his own 
intellectual limitations, and the limitations inherent in the working situation in which he finds 
himself, including limits on the support of his work, or his involvement with other pre-existing 
scientific commitments. While individual errors of judgment may arise, it is generally not true 
that all of the scientists who are actively cultivating a given field of science are wrong for very 
long. 

Even conceding that the entire body of "official" science might be in error for a time, 
we believe that there is no better way to correct error than to give free reign to the ideas of 
individual scientists to make decisions as to the directions in which scientific progress is most 
likely to be made. For legal work sensible people seek an attorney, and for medical treatment 
sensible people seek a qualified physician. The nations surest guarantee of scientific excellence 
is to leave the decision-making process to the individual and collective judgment of its 
scientists. 

Scientists are no respecters of authority. Our conclusion that the study of UFO reports 
is not likely to advance science will not be uncritically accepted by them. Nor should it be, nor 
do we wish it to be. For scientists, it is our hope that the detailed analytical presentation of 
what we were able to do, and of what we were unable to do, will assist them in deciding 
whether or not they agree with our conclusions. Our hope is that the details of this report will 
help other scientists in seeing what the problems are and the difficulties of coping with them. 

I f they agree with our conclusions, they will turn their valuable attention and talents 
elsewhere. If they disagree, it will be because our report has helped them reach a clear picture 
of wherein existing studies are faulty or incomplete and thereby will have stimulated ideas for 
more accurate studies. If they do not get such ideas and can formulate them, clearly, we have 
no doubt that support will be forthcoming to carry on with such clearly -defined, specific 
studies. We think that such ideas for work should be supported. 

Some readers may think that we have no wandered into a contradiction. Earlier, we 
said that we do not think study of UFO reports is likely to be a fruitful direction of scientific 
advance; now we have just said that persons with good ideas for specific studies in this field 
should be supported. This is no contradiction. Although we conclude after nearly two years of 
intensive study, that we do not see any fruitful lines of advance from the study of UFO reports, 
we believe that any scientist with adequate training and credentials who does come up with a 
clearly defined, specific proposal fro study should be supported. 

What we are saying here was said in a more general context nearly a century age by 
William Kingdon Clifford, a great English mathematical physicist. In his "Aims and 
Instruments of Scientific Thought" he expressed himself this way: 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Remember, then, that (scientific thought) is the guide of action; that the truth which it 
arrives at is not that which we can ideally contemplate without error, but that which we may 
act upon without fear; and you cannot fail to see that scientific thought is not an 
accompaniment or condition of human progress, but human progress itself. 

Just as individual scientists may make errors of judgment about fruitful directions for 
scientific effort, so also any individual administrator or committee which is charged with 
deciding on financial support of research proposals may also make an error of judgment. This 
possibility is minimized by the existence of parallel channels, for consideration by more than 
one group, of proposals for research projects. In the period since 1945, the federal government 
has evolved flexible and effective machinery for giving careful consideration by more than one 
group, of proposals from properly qualified scientists. What to some may seem like duplicated 
machinery actually acts as a safeguard against errors being made by some single official body. 
Even so, some errors could be made but the hazard is reduced nearly to zero. 

Therefore, we think that all of the agencies of the federal government, and the private 
foundations as well, ought to be willing to consider UFO research proposals along with the 
others submitted to them on an open-minded, unprejudiced basis. While we do not think at 
present that anything worthwhile is likely to come of such research each individual case ought 
to be carefully considered on its own merits. 

This formulation carries with it the corollary that we do not think that at this time the federal 
government ought to set up a major new agency, as some have suggested, for the scientific 
study of UFO's. This conclusion may not be true for all time. If, by the progress of research 
based on new ideas in this field, it then appears worthwhile to create such an agency, the 
decision to do so may be taken at that time. 

We find that there are important areas of atmospheric optics, including radio wave 
propagation, and of atmospheric electricity in which present knowledge is quite incomplete. 
These topics came to our attention in connection with the interpretation of some UFO reports, 
but they are also of fundamental scientific interest, and they are relevant to practical problems 
related to the improvement of safety of military and civilian flying. 

Research efforts are being carried out in these areas by the Department of Defense, the 
Environmental Science Services Administration, the National Aeronautics and Space 
Administration, and by universities and nonprofit research organizations such as the National 
Center for Atmospheric Research, whose work is sponsored by the National Science 
Foundation. We commend these efforts. By no means should our lack of enthusiasm for study 
of UFO reports as such be misconstrued as a recommendation that these important related 
fields of scientific work not be adequately supported in the future. In an era of major 
development of air travel, of space exploration, and of military aerospace activities, everything 
possible should be done to improve the training of astronauts and aircraft pilots in the 
recognition and understanding of such phenomena. 

As the reader of this report will readily judge, we have focused attention almost entirely on 
the physical sciences. This was in part a matter of determining priorities and in part because 
we found rather less than some persons may have expected in the way of psychiatric problems 
related to belief in the reality of UFO's as craft from remote galactic or intergalactic 
civilizations. We believe what the rigorous study of the beliefs — unsupported by valid 
evidence — held by individuals and even some groups might prove of scientific implication 
here that individual or group psychopathology is a principal area of study. Reports of UFO's 
offer interesting challenges to the student of cognitive processes as they are affected by 
individual and social variables. By this connection, we conclude that a content-analysis of 
press and television coverage of UFO reports might yield data of value both to the social 
scientist and the communications specialist. The lack of such a study in the present report is 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



due to a judgment on our part that other areas of investigation were of much higher priority. 
We do not suggest, however, that the UFO phenomena is, by its nature, more amenable to 
study in these disciplines than in the physical sciences. On the contrary, we conclude that the 
same specificity in proposed research in these areas is as desirable as it is in the physical 
sciences. 

The question remains as to what, if anything, the federal government should do about the 
UFO reports it receives from the general public. We are inclined to think that nothing should 
be done with them in the expectation that they are going to contribute to the advance of 
science. 

This question is inseparable from the question of the national defense interest of these 
reports. The history of the past 21 years has repeatedly led Air Force officers to the conclusion 
that none of the things seen, or thought to have been seen, which pass by the name of UFO 
reports, constituted any hazard or threat to national security. 

We felt that it was out of cur province to attempt an independent evaluation of this 
conclusion. We adopted the attitude that, without attempting to assume the defense 
responsibility which is that of the Air Force, if we came across any evidence whatever that 
seemed to us to indicate a defense hazard we would call it to the attention of the Air Force at 
once. We did not find any such evidence. We know of no reason to question the finding of the 
Air Force that the whole class of UFO reports so far considered does not pose a defense 
problem. 

At the same time, however, the basis for reaching an opinion of this kind is that such reports 
have been given attention, one by one, as they are received. Had no attention whatever been 
given to any of them, we would not be in a position to feel confident of this conclusion. 
Therefore it seems that only so much attention to the subject should be given as the 
Department of Defense deems to be necessary strictly from a defense point of view. The level 
of effort should not be raised because of arguments that the subject has scientific importance, 
so far as present indications go. 

It is our impression that the defense function would be performed within the framework 
established for intelligence and surveillance operations without the continuance of a special 
unit such as Project Blue Book, but this is a question for defense specialists rather than 
research scientists. 

It has been contended that the subject has been shrouded in official secrecy. We conclude 
otherwise. We have no evidence of secrecy concerning UFO reports. What has been miscalled 
secrecy has been no more than an intelligent policy of delay in releasing data so that the public 
does not become confused by premature publication of incomplete studies of reports. 

The subject of UFO's has been widely misrepresented to the public by a small number of 
individuals who have given sensationalized presentations in writings and public lectures. So 
far as we can judge, not many people have been misled by such irresponsible behavior, but 
whatever effect there has been has been bad. 

A related problem to which we wish to direct public attention is the mis -education in our 
schools which arises from the fact that many children are being allowed, if not actively 
encouraged, to devote their science study time to the reading of UFO books and magazine 
articles of the type referred to in the preceding paragraph. We feel that children are 
educationally harmed by absorbing unsound and erroneous material as if it were scientifically 
well founded. Such study is harmful not merely because of the erroneous nature of the material 
itself, but also because such study retards the development of a critical faculty with regard to 
scientific evidence, which to some degree ought to be part of the education of every American. 



86 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Therefore we strongly recommend that teachers refrain from giving students credit for school 
work based on their reading of the presently available UFO books and magazines. Teachers 
who find their students strongly motivated in this direction should attempt to channel their 
interests in the direction of serious study of astronomy and meteorology, and in the direction of 
critical analysis of arguments for fantastic propositions that are being supported by appeals to 
fallacious reasoning or false data. 

We hope that the results of our study will prove useful to scientists and those responsible for 
the formation of public policy generally in dealing with this problem which has now been with 
us for 21 straight years. 

The majority of press copy with regards to the Colorado study was straightforward and quite 
favorable. I was extremely pleased with the way Time, Newsweek, New York Times, Washington Post, 
Science, Dayton Daily News, NBC, ABC, and CBS commented on the report. Their comments were 
serious and informative. The saucer buffs were not going to accept the study's conclusions without a 
verbal fight, so staff members of NICAP called a press conference. They protested vehemently that the 
study had ignored vast amounts of reliable unexplained cases. It was the same old crap, if it wasn't 
endorsed or invented by NICAP, then criticize it or tear it down. The saucer buffs had good reason to 
be annoyed and concerned. The study had shot down a number of their pet philosophical theories, 
from which they have never recovered. Interest in the hobby clubs was diminished and the study 
certainly didn't help them recruit intellectual members or help their financial situation. After the 
Colorado study was released, UFO's and flying saucers were no longer font page copy and we 
decided to make our move. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



THE END IS PLANNED 



88 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Dr. Condon's report was thoroughly studied, reviewed, and criticized by various members of 
the Air Staff and by the staff at Project Blue Book. Everyone who reviewed the report and who had 
been intimately associated with Project Blue Book agreed that it was a good study and required some 
action on our part. Major Dave Shea, Lt. Col. Jim Aikman, and myself were determined that the 
negative inertia which was present on the staff at the time that the Robertson Panel Report was 
released would disappear. Dr. Ratchford and Dan Taylor of CAR would contribute, but the ball game 
now belonged to the Air Staff. We decided to convene a meeting and invite the Commands which had 
been intimately involved with the program. The Pentagon sent out the invitations and the meeting was 
set for 19 February, 1969. We had a good cross-section of representatives and everyone was allowed 
to criticize the report, state his Commands' position with regards to UFO's, and to submit 
recommendations. I was prepared to have a knock-down-drag-out sort of meeting, but it never 
materialized that way and the conclave broke up with one unanimous decision: We now have a 
hammer so lets use it. I left the meeting delighted, full of hope, and anxious to break the news to my 
Commander Colonel George R. Weinbrenner. There was one thing that all my Commanders; Colonel 
Raymond S. Sleeper, George R. Weinbrenner, Brig. General Arthur J. Pierce, and Brig. General 
Arthur W. Cruikshank, had in common and that was "Project Blue Book was a great big pain in the 
ass". That quote came from Colonel Sleeper, but the rest of my Commanders felt the same way and 
said the same thing using different words. The Project was a drain on space, money, engineering, 
talent, clerical help, and it subjected the organization to unwanted publicity. Every time a reporte4r 
came to visit me, my Commanders would cringe for fear that my remarks would bring the 
organization unwanted publicity. This happened a couple of times, but no lasting damage was ever 
done. 

THE PACKAGE 

On the plane back to Wright-Patterson I kept thinking about my next assignment. Would it be 
Elgin, Hanscom, or "oh no, not Rome, New York again". I wasn't too keen on going back to ^ro 
degree weather again. As soon as I got into Dayton I informed Colonel Weinbrenner and Dr. Cacioppo 
of the conclave's decision. Colonel Weinbrenner was extremely happy and told me to stay with it and 
keep him informed. I passed many memos to Colonel Weinbrenner during the period July to 
December, 1969, because the "package" which recommended canceling Project Blue Book hit many 
snags. The "package" as we referred to it was a series of documents and papers which supported the 
recommendations to cancel the Project. At one time, the "package" measured two and one-half inches. 
Every time some General didn't like a word, sentence, or paragraph, the changes had to be 
incorporated and that portion had to be re-typed. Generals in the Pentagon like to express themselves 
by using pet words and expressions and this causes a lot of re-write when you try to get their 
coordination signature on a document. The biggest snag we hit was in the General Council's office. 
They had the package for at least two and one -half months, but in all fairness to them their job was 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



89 



one of the toughest. Their main task is to protect the Secretary and every word, phrase, and sentence 
could have an ominous meaning if used in the wrong way. Needless to say, the re-write was 
tremendous after the General Council reviewed the package. A word here, a phrase or sentence there, 
and back to the typewriter went the complete package. I was mad at the time because of the time 
delay, but they did a hell of a good job. The delay was not really all their fault either. 

THE GENERAL COUNCIL 

There were a couple of incidents which happened during this time which cause the General 
Council to drop his work on the package and concentrate on other efforts. One of these, was the 
insistent request by Congressman Morris K. Udall that we supply his constituent, Dr. James E. 
McDonald, with certain file information which was considered confidential. McDonald wanted certain 
names and addresses of witnesses to specific sightings and we wouldn't give them to him. 
Congressman Udall interceded in McDonald's behalf, but I wouldn't budge. In my early days as chief 
of the Project, I had been burned twice for releasing the names of witnesses and I wasn't going to get 
burned any more. One naive newcomer to the Pentagon suggested to me that it might be best if I gave 
McDonald the information which he wanted. To his suggestion I replied, "No, hell no", however, I 
would be willing to send him the original files and he could reproduce them and send McDonald any 
information which his litde heart desired. I had placed the monkey on his back and he must not have 
liked the load, because he never called again. We supplied McDonald with the sighting information 
which he requested, however, I deleted all names and addresses from reproduced copies. He could 
have gotten the same information without going through Congressman Udall, however, this procedure 
requires the involvement of five or six other high level people and guarantees some kind of instant 
response. I can't really blame some of the Congressmen, but I wish some of their Aides would grow 
up and learn how to screen the mail for legitimate and worthwhile requests. I've had some idiotic 
requests pass through my desk, which weren't worth the effort, but I've had to comply in order to 
satisfy some Congressional Aide's use of his Congressman's franking signature. If you ever want to 
get a response to a problem or question, it doesn't matter how idiotic it might be, write your 
congressman and you'll get some sort of answer. Just remember that some poor son-of-a-bitch in your 
government's structure had to do all the research and the writing to supply you with the answer. 
Chances are, your Congressman never got to see your letter and never got to see his reply to you. I'm 
not knocking the system, it's the best I've seen. 

THE COORDINATION 

When the General Council finished his critique of the package and signed the coordination 
sheet, we thought we had it whipped, but we hit snags all over the Pentagon. Too many people worried 
about things that were none of their business, consequently delays were frequent until they could be 
convinced that their suggestion or question had been taken into consideration. In most offices, the 



90 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



coordination was accomplished by a General officer or equivalent civilian chief. At the beginning, I 
never thought that my piddling little project would cause so much concern at such a high level in our 
government structure, but it did. Before the Air Force UFO Project could be cancelled the directive to 
accomplish that task had to be coordinated at the Air Staff level, and the last person on the chain of 
command at that level was General Ryan, the Chief of Staff. The next level of coordination was the 
Secretary's level and the Honorable Fred Seamans was the final coordinator at this level. The next 
level was the DOD, however this was more of a courtesy coordination and no delays or snags were 
anticipated after Secretary Seamans affixed his signature. 

THE ANNOUNCEMENT 

It was now December, 1969, and eleven months had passed since Dr. Condon had submitted 
his report to the Air Force and to the nation. Traditionally, December is a bad month for any action in 
the Military Civilian Service structure. Everyone is occupied with Christmas baskets for the needy 
families, parties, leaves, etc. I really hadn't expected the Secretary to announce his decision to cancel 
Project Blue Book during Christmas week, however, that is exactly what happened. On the sixteenth 
of December, 1969, Major Shea from the Pentagon called and informed me that a news release was to 
be issued the following day announcing that Project Blue Book was to be cancelled, effective 
immediately. I called up my immediate boss, Colonel Richard Bagnard, and told him the good news. 
He told me that he would pass the good news to the "ole man", however, I was to go ahead and write a 
memo for the record. Lt. Carmen Marano, who had been my assistant since September of 1968, and I 
had prepared ourselves for an avalanche of telephone calls. As soon as the news hit the Wire Services, 
the telephone started ringing. For a few days we were busy answering questions and then the 
telephone stopped ringing. Boredom began to creep in as we waited for the official word to close the 
office. Sharon Cosby, my secretary after Marilyn left, Carman and I spent a boring two weeks waiting 
for the official word. We knew it was on its way, but it was held up at Command Headquarters 
because of the holiday inertia. During those two weeks, I had time for luxurious thoughts about the 
program's past. I could also feel that the end was near and it would only be a matter of time before we 
would put the project to rest. As boredom left us, a certain degree of sadness began to take its place. 

THE END IS NEAR 

The news got around that we were closing our office, so in no time at all everything was 
parceled out. John Ballard, our Security Officer, had a need for my office and the old UFO file 
cabinet, so it was bequeathed to him without ceremonies. Major Frey, our Staff Weather Officer, had 
the good fortune of getting my lovely secretary, Sharon Cosby. Lt. Colonel Shra, won out in the end 
and my physicist assistant, Lt. Carman Marano went to work for him. I was on my way out of the 
service, so no special plans were made for me. 

Lt. Marano and Sharon started indexing the file s, so that we could start packing them. I started 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



91 



reviewing each one of the file cases for content and arrangement. It was tedious work, but it had to be 
done and when we started packing the cases it was orderly and very neatly done. The files were 
packed in new boxes and each one was labeled. The decision was made by the Pentagon that the UFO 
case files would be deposited in the Historical Division of the USAF Archives at Maxwell Air Force 
Base, Alabama. Dr. Mawar was in charge of the Division and he and I talked at length about the 
transfer. The ground work for the transfer was discussed between he and I and we could foresee no 
problems. We finished packing the files and now all I needed was an aircraft to transport the files and 
myself to Maxwell. Colonel Weinbrenner had decreed this. I was to baby sit with those files until the 
Archives had officially signed for them. The task of getting an aircraft was assigned to Tony Ajar, 
Chief Transport Coordinator for FTD. Tony called me up one Friday afternoon and told me that he had 
an aircraft, but it was going to Miami first. I told him so, hell, what if we got diverted and had to land 
in Cuba, I'd be in a hell of a pickle. Five days later he called me up and told me that he had diverted a 
C-118 that was going to New Orleans. They would take me and the records to Maxwell, but I had to 
have the records loaded by ten o'clock. I told him that he was out of his ever-loving mind, but that I 
would try. I chased Tony and John Eckler all over the God damned base and finally caught up with 
them as Base Operations. Tony and John had loaded the records on the plane and little beads of 
perspiration were running down their faces. I had to laugh as I told them, "You guys really want to get 
rid of me, don't you?" They both laughed and Tony said, "Hell, yes, now start walking up the ramp, 
your plane is waiting", and it had been waiting for about five minutes. I felt like a very important 
person, however, my task was to deliver some very important papers. 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



THE END OF A $20,000,000 FIASCO 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



93 



The flight to Maxwell was nice and easy. As soon as we touched down a truck was on its way 
to unload the records. We reached the Archives in about five minutes and I turned the records over to 
the Custodian. It was a simple task with very little dialogue and no ceremonies. That simple task 
ended my responsibilities as the Chief of Project Blue Book and the Foreign Technology Division was 
no longer the record keeper for the UFO files. Essentially, that ended the Air Force's association with 
a $20,000,000 fiasco. I say essentially, because the Air Force still has to maintain the records for an 
indeterminate period. My feeling is that the records should be permanently retired, however, pressure 
from the hobby clubs will keep them open for a while longer. The Air Force is still on the hook and 
the American taxpayer will continue to pay for maintaining worthless records. Such is the way of 
pressure groups and American politics. 

In the end, the communications media had a tremendous influence in the termination of the 
USAF UFO program. Their straight forward reporting of Dr. Condon's study convinced the American 
masses that the USAF UFO project was no longer necessary. One singular person deserves the 
gratitude of his fellow countrymen and that is Dr. Edward U. Condon. His efforts saved the American 
taxpayer many millions of dollars. He was not afraid to speak his piece, even though he knew that it 
would not be popular with most of the hobby clubs and various academic cliques. 

Projects Blue Book, Grudge, and Sign have been retired and so ends another chapter of Air 
Force contribution to American history. 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



OBSERVATIONS OF AN EX-INVESTIGATING OFFICER (UFO) 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



95 



The Air Force has kept detailed records of all UFO reports whic h have been submitted to the 
Project office at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. The following statistical data was derived from 
those records. 

Total UFO reports (sightings) submitted to the Project office 



Year Total Reports Source 

1947 102 case files 

1948 166 

1949 370 

1950 243 

1951 170 

1952 1,225 

1953 509 

1954 487 

1955 545 

1956 670 

1957 1,006 

1958 627 

1959 390 

1960 557 

1961 591 

1962 474 

1963 399 

1964 562 

1965 887 

1966 1,060 

1967 1,000 

1968 392 

1969 148 

12,580 total reports 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR YEARS 1953-1966 
(on following page) 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR YEARS 1953-1965 

TOTAL CASES BY CATEGORY 





1953 


1954 


1955 


1956 


1957 


1958 


1959 


1960 


1961 


1962 


1963 


1964 


1965 


TOTAL 


Astronomical 


175 


137 


135 


222 


341 


231 


144 


235 


203 


136 


85 


123 


250 


2,417 


Aircraft 


73 


80 


124 


148 


218 


106 


63 


66 


77 I 


68 


73 


71 


222 


1,389 


Balloon 


78 


63 


102 


93 


114 


58 


31 


22 


37 


19 


28 


20 


36 


701 


Insufficient 
Data 


79 


103 


95 


132 


191 


111 


65 


105 


115 


94 


59 


99 


85 


1,333 


Other 


62 


58 


65 


61 


120 


93 


75 


94 


77 


65 


58 


88 


126 


1,042 


Satellite 


0 


0 


0 


0 


8 


18 


0 


21 


69 


77 


82 


142 


152 


569 


Unidentified 


42 


46 


24 


14 


14 


10 


12 


14 


13 


15 


14 


19 


16 


253 


TOTAL 


509 


487 


545 


670 


1,006 


627 


390 


557 


591 


474 


399 


562 


887 


7,704 



ASTRONOMICAL SIGHTINGS 



I I 


1953 


1954 


| 1955 


1956 


1957 


1958 


1959 


1960 




1961 


1962 


1963 


1964 


1965 


TOTAL I 


Meteors 


70 


92 


79 


88 


179 


168 


100 


187 




119 


95 


57 


61 


101 


1,396 


Stars and 
Planets 


101 


44 


52 


131 


144 


56 


40 


45 




78 


36 


23 


55 


140 


945 


Other 


4 


1 


4 


3 


18 


7 


4 


3 




6 


|~~5~ 


5 


| 7 


9 


76 


TOTAL 


175 


137 


135 


222 


341 


231 


144 


235 




203 


| 136 


85 


| 123 


250 


2,417 



OTHER CASES 





1953 


1954 


1955 


1956 


1957 


1958 


1959 


1960 


1961 


1962 


1963 


1964 


1965 


TOTAL 


Hoaxes, Hallucinations, Unreliable Reports and 
Psychological Causes 


15 


6 


18 


16 


37 


29 


14 


13 


17 


11 


16 


34 


34 


260 


Missiles and Rockets 


2 


1 


1 


3 


2 


6 


14 


12 


13 


9 


13 


7 


10 


93 


Reflections 


4 


6 


4 


3 


2 


7 | 


11 | 


9 


3 


3 


0 


2 


7 


61 


Flares and Fireworks 


1 


4 


8 


6 


8 


3 


5 


7 


4 


3 


3 


7 


4 


63 


Mirages and Inversions 


3 


2 


4 


1 


5 


2 


4 


5 


6 


3 


0 


2 


5 


42 


Search and Groundlights 


9 


6 


14 


9 


12 


8 


5 


6 


1 


3 


2 


6 


9 


90 


Clouds and Contrails 


6 


3 


2 


1 


9 


5 


3 


4 


5 


4 


5 


0 


3 


50 


Chaff 


0 


2 


0 


1 


2 


6 


1 


4 


3 


5 


2 


1 


1 


28 


Birds 


4 


7 


2 


6 


1 


1 


0 


3 


2 


2 


2 


4 


11 


45 


Radar Analysis 


15 


7 


1 


8 


27 


3 


8 


6 


9 


0 


1 


2 


3 


90 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



| Photo Analysis 


II 1 


1 1 


II 2 


II 4 


II 1 


II 7 


II 4 


II 6 


II 3 


|| 2 


II 3 


II 6 


II 6 


46 


| Physical Specimens 


II 1 


II 6 


II 5 


II 3 


II 5 


II 10 


II 3 


II 7 


II 4 


II 15 


II 3 


II 8 


II 12 


II 82 


| Satellite Decay 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 1 


II 0 


II 9 


II 3 


II 3 


II 4 


II 3 


II 8 


II 31 


| Other 


I 1 


II 1 


II 4 


II °- 


II 2 


II § 


II 2 


II 2 


II 4 


II ?- 


II 4 


II § 


II 1^ 


II 61 


TOTAL 


II 62 


58 


II 65 


II 61 


II 12 0 


II 93 


I 7 5 


II 34 


II 77 


II 65 


| 58 


II 33 


| 126 


| 1,042 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR 1966 

TOTAL CASES BY CATEGORY 



I 


| JAN 


| FEB 


| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


| JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


| TOTAL 


| ASTRONOMICAL 


I J~A 1 

[u_ 


1 n 

8 


I T~a 

44 


1 7^ 

47 


1 — 

1 15 


1 — 

1 12 


| 20 


| 20 


| 12 


38 


| 21 


| 4 


| 255 


| AIRCRAFT 


I 8 


1 4 


| 32 


1 42 


31 


| 26 


| 29 


| 28 


I 14 


I 24 


| 22 


I 10 


| 270 


| BALLOON 


I 0 


1 0 


I 2 


1 5 


I 3 


I 2 


| 7 


I 4 


I 2 


I 5 


1 


| 1 


| 32 


| INSUFFDATA 


| 8 


| 3 


Li5_ 


1 27 


I 30 


| 22 


I 19 


I 19 


I 19 


I 34 


I 21 


I 6 


| 242 


| OTHER 


I 5 


1 




1 ^ 


| 7 


I 5 


I 10 


I 5 


| 7 


I 9 


I 8 


I 3 


| 94 


| SATELLITE 


I 2 


I 0 


| 22 


1 5 


I 12 


I 21 


I 5 


| 23 


I 5 


I 11 


I 2 


| 1 


109 


| UNIDENTIFIED 


| 1 


| 2 


I 5 


| 2 


| 1 


| 4 


I 3 


I 3 


I 4 


I 3 


| 1 


| 1 


| 30 


| PENDING 


| 0 


| 0 


| 0 


| 0 


| 0 


| 0 


I °- 


| 2 


LiL 


I 2 


I § 


I 14 


| £8 


TOTAL 


| 38 


I 18 


| 158 


143 


| 99 


| 92 


93 


| 104 


I 67 


| 126 


| 82 


| 40 


| 1,060 



ASTRONOMICAL 





JAN 


| FEB 


| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


| JUL 


J|_AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


| TOTAL 


Meteors 


8 


| 1 




19 


I 5 


I 3 


I 10 


|| 7 


| 4 


I 8 


I 8 




83 


Stars/Planets 


4 


I 6 


| 32 


| 23 


| 7 


I 8 


I 9 


II 10 


I 7 


| 29 


I i2 


I 2 


| 149 


Other 


2a 


la 


| 4a 


| 5a 


| 3a 


| la 


| la 


| 3ab 


| la 


I 1^ 


I l£ 




| 23 


TOTAL 


14 


| 8 


| 44 


| 47 


| 15 


|12 


| 20 


II 20 


I 1 2 


| 38 


I 21 


I 4 


| 255 



(a) moon (b) unusual sunset (c) unusual meteorological condition 



OTHER 





JAN 


FEB 


MAR 


APR 


MAY 


JUN 


JUL 


AUG 


SEP 


OCT 


NOV 


DEC 


TOTAL 


Hoaxes, Conf. 
Psy 


2 


1 


6 


3 


2 


2 


2 


1 


3 


4 


3 




29 


Missiles/Rockets 


















1 




1 




2 


Search/Ground 
lights 






1 


1 


3 




2 


1 




1 




1 


10 


Flares/Fireworks 








1 








1 






1 


1 


4 


Reflections 








3 


1 


2 


1 








2 




9 


Clouds/Contrails 


2 




3 










1p 


2p 






1p 


9 


Birds 






1 


4 


1 










2 


1 




9 


Radar Analysis 


















1? 








1 


Physical 
Specimen 








1f 






2st 


1f 










4 



iv Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



| Satellite Decay 


II 1 




1UZ 


I II 
















II 2 


| Photo Analysis 


II 




| 5bcde? 


I 2ge 




I 2c 






II iq 






II 10 


| Miscellaneous 


II 




II 2ah 




II 1j 


I 1k 






II 1r 






II 5 


TOTAL 


II 5 


II 1 


II 19 


| 15 || 7 


II 5 


I 1 ° 


II 5 


II 7 


II 9 


II § 


II 3 


II 9 4 



(a) swamp gas (b) stellar image (c) no image (d) insuff data (e) processing defect (f) chaff (g) electric light (h) blown transformer (i) lighthouse (j) blimp (k) plasma (n) 
anomalous propagation (p) artificial cloud release (q) time exposure of moon reported to be UFO (r) electric wires sparking (s) indentations in ground and soil samples (t) 
unknown animal 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR 1967 

TOTAL CASES BY CATEGORY 



I 


| JAN 


| FEB 


| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


| JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


I TOTAL I 


| ASTRONOMICAL 


I 11 


| 30 


| 38 


| 22 


I 14 


| 7 


I 10 


I 3 


8 


I 4 


I 13 


I 4 


164 


| AIRCRAFT 


I 25 


| 26 


I 37 


| 28 


| 22 


I 13 


I 21 


I 8 


I 9 


I 15 


I 12 


I 3 


219 


| BALLOON 


| 3 


| 8 


| 21 


I 11 


I 3 


I 3 


I 6 


I 5 


I 4 


| 6 


| 3 


| 6 


LZ?_ 


| INSUFFDATA 


| 23 


| 30 


I 34 


| 29 


I 15 


| 22 


| 22 


I 17 


I 27 


I 16 


I 19 


I 13 


| 267 


OTHER 


I 16 


13 


| 28 


| 20 


8 


I 13 


I 11 


I 14 


21 


I 21 


I 9 


8 


182 


| SATELLITE 


| 4 


I 6 


|_2 


I 11 


I 3 


I 19 


I 11 


| 1 


| 7 


I 4 


I 2 


| 1 


I 71 


| UNIDENTIFIED 


I 0 


I 5 


I 7 


| 1 


| 1 


I 2 


| 1 


I 0 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


I 0 


I 18 


| PENDING 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I ?- 


TOTAL 


| 82 


118 


| 167 


122 


| 66 


I 79 


| 82 


| 48 


I 7 6 


I 67 


| 58 


| 35 


| 1000 



ASTRONOMICAL SIGHTINGS 





| JAN 


| FEB 


|| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


|| JUN 


| JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


I TOTAL I 


| Meteors 


I 4 


I 4 


II 6 


| 7 


| 1 


II 2 


II 2 


I 2 


I 3 


I 1 


I 2 




| 35 


| Stars/Planets 


I 6 


| 24 


II 32 


I 15 


I 11 


II 5 


|| 8 


| 1 


| 5 


| 3 


| 10 


| 3 


| 123 


| Other 


I 1^ 


I 23. 


II fi 


I fi 


I 2a 


II fi 


II fi 


I fi 


l° 


I fi 


la 


I fi 


I fi 


TOTAL 


I 11 


| 30 


II 38 


| 22 


I 14 


II 7 


II 10 


I 3 


I 8 


I 4 


13 


I 4 


164 



(a) moon 
OTHER CASES 





JAN 


FEB 


MAR 


APR 


MAY 


JUN 


JUL 


AUG 


SEP 


OCT 


NOV 


DEC 


TOTAL 


Hoaxes, Hallucinations, Unreliable Report, 
Psych, causes, Etc. 


4 


5 


6 


7 


4 


4 


6 


4 


10 


8 


5 


4 


67 


Missiles/Rockets 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


1 


1 


0 


0 


0 


I 3 


Reflections 


1 


0 


2 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 






Flares/Fireworks 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


° 


I 2 


Mirage/Inversion 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 


| 1 


Search/Ground lights 


1 


0 


3 


0 






1 


1 


0 


o 




1 


| 7 


Clouds/Contrails 


2 


0 


3 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 


1 


0 


1 


I 8 


Chaff 


0 


0 


3 


0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


I 5 


Birds 


0 


0 


0 


2 


0 


1 


0 


0 


1 


3 


0 


0 


| 7 


Radar Analysis 


0 


1a 


1a 


1a 


0 


0 


0 


0 


iy 


3yz(aa) 


1e 


0 


I 8 


Photo Analysis 


7abcd 


5acfg 


Sadehjkl 


Sabehno 


3aqr 


6aflo 


3ab 


5abfqt 


3af 


3bnq 


2n(cc) 


2ab 


| 55 



vi Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



| Physical Specimen 


1HZ 


II o 


II iq 


II o 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II iv 


||2x 


II o 


II 0 


II o 


II 4 


| Satellite Decay 


1 


II 1 




1 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 2 


II o 


II 0 


II o 


II 5 


| Other 


II o 


ig 


II 0 


1P 


II 0 


II 1s 


II 0 


II 1 J 


II o 


JL±(bb) 


II 0 


II o 


II 5 


TOTAL 


16 


II 13 


II 28 


II 20 


II 8 


II 13 


11 


II 14 


|| 21 


|| 21 


II 9 


II 8 


II 182 



(a) Insufficient data 

(b) small man-made object 

(c) missile activity 

(d) aircraft 

(e) balloon 

(f) processing defect 

(g) plasma 

(h) hoax 

(i) conflicting data 
(j) false targets 

(k) insufficient clarity 
(I) reflections 
(m) silica 

(n) foreign matter on negative 
(o) stars and planets 



(p) parachute jump 

(q) insufficient clarity 

(r) static electricity 

(s) ball lightning 

(t) air bell or break in emulsion 

(u) kite 

(v) coke 

(w) slag 

(x) unalloyed iron 

(y) anomalous propagation 

(z) birds 

(aa) ground targets 
(bb) burning barn 
(cc) light source 



viii 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR 1968 

TOTAL CASES BY CATEGORY 



I 


| JAN 


| FEB 


| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


| JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


| TOTAL 


| ASTRONOMICAL 


I 4 


I 6 


I 3 


I 8 


I 2 


I 2 


I 4 


I 4 


I 3 


I 2 


I 3 


I 2 


43 




| AIRCRAFT 


I 3 


I 5 


I 8 


I 5 


I 0 


I 5 


I 6 


I 6 


I 2 


I 5 


I 0 


I 4 


| 49 




| BALLOON 


| 4 


| 4 


| 2 


I 3 


| 2 


| 1 


I 3 


I 3 


| 7 


| 2 


I 5 


| 4 


| 40 


_l 


| INSUFFDATA 


I 9 


I 5 


I 18 


I 9 


I 7 


I 9 


I 19 


I 21 


I 10 


I 19 


I 3 


| 1 


130 




| OTHER 


I 8 


|3 


I 16 


I 5 


I 3 


I 12 


I 14 


I 12 


I 9 


9 


I 9 


I 4 


102 




| SATELLITE 


l° 


I 4 


u_ 


I 5 


I 0 


| 1 


| 7 


I 2 


I 0 


I 0 


I 3 


I 2 


I 25 




| UNIDENTIFIED 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


I 3 




| PENDING 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 




TOTAL 


| 26 


| 28 


48 


| 35 


I 14 


| 30 


| 53 


| 48 


| 32 


I 37 


| 24 


I 17 


| 392 





ASTRONOMICAL SIGHTINGS 







| JAN 


| FEB 


| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


| JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


| TOTAL 


| Meteors 


I 2 


| 1 


II 0 


I 4 


1 2 


1° 


I 1 


I 0 


l° 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


I 11 


| Stars/Planets 


I 2 


I 5 


|| 3 


I 3 


1 0 


| 1 


| 1 


I 2 


I 3 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


| 26 


| Other 


I 2 


I 2 


|| 0 


la 


| 0 


I 1^ 


I 2a 


I 2a 


|2 


|2 


I 2 


I 2 


I 2 


TOTAL 


I 4 


I 8 


II 3 


1 8 


1 2 


I 2 


I 4 


I 4 


I 3 


I 2 


I 3 


I 2 


I 43 



(a) moon (b) sun spot 
OTHER 





JAN 




FEB 


MAR 


APR 


MAY 


JUN 


JUL 


AUG 




SEP 


OCT 


NOV 


DEC 


TOTAL 


Hoaxes, Hallucinations, Unreliable Reports, Psych. Causes, 
Etc. 


4 




3 


9 


2 


2 


7 


7 


8 




8 


5 


6 


4 


65 


Missiles/Rockets 


0 




0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 




0 


0 


0 


0 


2 


Reflections 


1 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


2 


Flares/Fireworks 


0 




0 


0 


0 


| o 


U | 


I o 


0 




[o | 


0 


0 


0 


1 


Mirage/Inversion 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Search/Ground lights 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


L°_ 


3 


0 


3 


Clouds/Contrails 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Chaff 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 




0 


0 


0 


L°_ 


0 


Birds 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 




° 


0 


0 


L9_ 


0 


Radar Analysis 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1h 


0 






1 i 


0 


0 


2 



| Photo Analysis 


II 0 


II o 


| 3ab 


I 0 


II 1d 


| 3ac 


I 1c 


| 2ae 


I 1a 


2ck 


I 0 


|| 0 


II 1 3 


| Physical Specimen 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 1c 


II 0 


II 0 


I 1i 


II 0 


I 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II 2 


| Satellite Decay 


II 1 


II 0 


II 3 


I 2 


II 0 


I 1 


I 0 


II 0 


I 0 


II o 


I 0 


II 0 




| Other 


II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


I 0 


II 0 


II 0 


I 3 


II 1f 


I 0 


II 1 i 


I 0 


II 0 


II 5 


TOTAL 


II 6 


II 3 


II 1 6 


I 5 


II 3 


I 12 


I 14 


II 12 


I 9 


II 9 


I 9 


II 4 


II 1 °2 



X 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



(a) insufficient data 

(b) processing defect 

(c) ordinary metal composition 

(d) water spots 

(e) small manmade object 

(f) debris in the wind 

(g) fire flies 

(h) anomalous propagation 

(i) pumice-like glass 
(j) plasma 

(k) no image 



STATISTICAL DATA FOR 1969 

TOTAL CASES BY CATEGORY 

(Compiled 21 January 1970) 



I 


JAN 

1 


FEB 

1 


MAR 


APR 


MAY 

1 


JUN 

I ^=^= 


I JUL 

1 


AUG 

1 


SEP 

1 


OCT 

1 


| NOV 


| DEC 


| TOTAL 


| ASTRONOMICAL 


1 4 


1 5 


6 


1 


4 


I 3 


1 2 


1 10 


1 2 


1 3 


I 0 


I 0 


| 40 


| AIRCRAFT 


1 5 


1 6 


1 4 


| 1 


| 1 


I 1 


| 1 


I 2 


| 1 


1 3 


I 2 


l° 


I 27 


| BALLOON 


1 4 




| 1 


I 5 


l° 


I 1 


| 3 


| 3 


L°_ 


I 2 


I 1 


l° 


| 22 


| INSUFFDATA 


1 0 


1 3 


I 0 


I 2 


I 2 


I 3 


I 3 


I 4 


1 3 


2 


l° 


I 2 


| 24 


OTHER 


6 


1 4 


I 3 


| 1 


I 3 


I 1 


I 2 


I 2 


1 1 


1 4 


I 1 


l° 


| 28 


| SATELLITE 


1 0 


1 3 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


| 1 


I 0 


| 1 


1 1 


1 0 


I 0 


I 0 




| UNIDENTIFIED 


1 1 


1 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


I 0 


1 0 


1 0 


I 0 


I 0 


nz 


| PENDING 


I fi 


1 fi 


I fi 


I fi 


0 


I a 


I fi 


I fi 


0 


1 fi 


l° 


u 


I fi 


TOTAL 


| 20 


| 23 


I 14 


I 1 0 


I 1 ° 


1 10 


I 11 


| 22 


I 8 


1 14 


I 4 


I 2 


148 



ASTRONOMICAL 



|| JAN 


| FEB 


|| MAR 


| APR 


| MAY 


| JUN 


I JUL 


| AUG 


| SEP 


| OCT 


| NOV 


| DEC 


I TOTAL I 


| Meteors || 0 


I 3 


II 2 


I 0 


I 0 


II 2 


I 1 


I 5 


l° 


I 


I 0 


I 0 


I 13 


| Stars/Planets || 4 


I 2 


II 4 


| 1 


I 4 


II 1 


u_ 


I 4 


I 2 


| 3 


| 0 


| 0 


| 26 


| Other || 0 


I fi 


II fi 


I fi 


I fi 


II 9 


I fi 


I 13 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


I fi 


| 1 


TOTAL || 4 


I 5 


II 6 


| 1 


I 4 


II 3 


1 2 


I 1 o 


I 2 


I 3 


I o 


I o 


40 



(a) moon 



OTHER 





JAN 


FEB 


MAR 


APR 


MAY 


JUN 


JUL 


AUG 




SEP 


OCT 


NOV 


DEC 


TOTAL 


Hoaxes, Hallucinations, Unreliable Reports, Psych. Causes, 
Etc. 


4 


2 


1 


0 


2 


0 


1 


1 




0 


2 


0 


0 


13 


Missiles/Rockets 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 




1 


1 


0 


0 


3 


Reflections 


1 


0 


0 


0 


| o 


0 


L°_ 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


Flares/Fireworks 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Mirage/lnversbn 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Search/Ground lights 


0 


0 


1 


0 


0 


0 


° 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


1 


Clouds/Contrails 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Chaff 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Birds 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




° 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Radar Analysis 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


0 




0 


0 


0 


0 


0 


Photo Analysis 


1? 


1b 


1d 


1e 


0 


0 


0 


0 




° 


0 


1f 


0 


5 



xii Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



| Physical Specimen 


II 0 


II o 


II 0 




II 0 


II 0 


II 0 


II o 


I 0 


II o 


II 0 






| Satellite Decay 


II 0 


II 0 


II o 


II o 


I 1 


II 0 


II 0 


II 1 


I 0 


II 1 


II o 


II o 


ii 3 


| Other 


II 0 


1 1c 


II 0 


II o 


II 0 


II 0 


I 1c 


II 0 


I 0 


II o 


II 0 


II o 


ii 2 


TOTAL 


II 6 


II 4 


II 3 


II 1 


II 3 


I 1 


II 2 


II 2 


| 1 


II 4 


II 1 


II o 


ii 23 



(a) swamp gas (b) stellar image (c) no image (d) insuff data (e) processing defect (f) chaff (g) electric light (h) blown transformer (i) lighthouse (j) blimp (k) plasma (n) 
anomalous propagation (p) artificial cloud release (q) time exposure of moon reported to be UFO (r) electric wires sparking (s) indentations in ground and soil samples (t) 
unknown animal 



108 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



The statistical data bring out some interesting correlations with regards to frequency of 
sightings in years 1952, 2957, and 1964-1967. In the year 1957, according to UFO buffs and certain 
members of the News Media, Washington D.C. was invaded by waves of flying saucers. The saucers 
were plotted on various radar sets in the Washington vicinity and the Communications Media went 
wild. The more copy the communications media gave the Washington D.C. saucers, the greater the 
number of sightings which were reported to the Air Force. Because of the number of unidentified 
moving targets which were being reported by radar operators, the Civil aeronautics Administration 
made a study of this phenomenon and published is conclusions in May of 1953. The following is a 
summary of the report. 

SUMMARY 

This report describes the investigation of a type of unidentified moving target which 
has been observed recently in considerable numbers on the viewing screens of the air traffic 
control radar equipment operated by the Civil Aeronautics Administration. This investigation 
was conducted by means of interviews with personnel concerned, by study and correlation of 
official records, and by first-hand observation of numerous targets on the Washington 
Microwave-Early -Warning(MEW) radar and on the Indianapolis ABR-2 radar. 

It was determined that targets which are known to operating personnel by various 
terminologies such as "ghosts", "angels", or "pixies" do not represent new phenomena; nor are 
they peculiar to the Washington area. Correlation of controllers reports with United States 
Weather Bureau records indicated that a surface temperature inversion was almost always 
noted when such targets appeared on the radar. 

Firsthand observation in the tracking and subsequent motion analysis of 80 of these 
unidentified targets indicated that a large number of these were actually secondary reflections 
of a radar beam. Apparently these reflections were produced by isolated refracting areas which 
traveled with the wind at or near the temperature inversion levels. 

Although the exact size, shape, and composition of these isolated areas are not 
known, it is believed that they may be atmospheric eddies produced by a shearing action of 
dissimilar air strata. It appears possible that such eddies may refract and focus the radar energy 
with a lens effect to produce small concentrations of ground return with sufficient intensity to 
show up in the radar display. It is also believed that the correlation of the appearance of these 
radar targets with visual reports of so-called "flying saucers" is due to the strong probability 
that both effects are caused primarily by abrupt temperature inversions. 

Such radar targets are usually easy to recognize because of their generally weak 
return and slow ground speed. Unfortunately, radar returns from small helicopters sometimes 
present these same characteristics. Spurious targets of this type can become a nuisance under 
busy traffic conditions, particularly in localities where helicopter operations are prevalent. 

The report is comprehensive and replete with technical data. The following is their 
conclusions with regards to the Washington D.C. radar sightings. 

1. It is believed that most of the unidentified targets observed on the Washington MEW 

radar during the period beginning on the night of August 13, 1952, and the period beginning on 
the night of August 15, 1952, were ground returned caused by reflection phenomena closely 
connected with the temperature inversions in the lower atmosphere. 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



109 



2. Unidentified radar targets of the type described in this report have been noticed since 
the early days of radar. Unusual weather conditions prevailing in the Washington area during 
the summer of 1952 were exceptionally conductive to the formation of these phenomena. 

3. Present evidence indicates that the appearance of unidentified targets of this nature on 
radar scopes has but little effect on the control of air traffic. At its worst, it forms a nuisance by 
cluttering the scope display and by requiring that additional traffic information or heading 
instructions be issued in order to protect other traffic against the possibility that such a target 
might be a helicopter. 

4. In some cases, it would be desirable to provide the controller with a more positive 
method of identifying targets such as these so that he could determine quickly whether they are 
spurious or whether they are actual aircraft. 

The number of sightings in 1953 leveled off, but flying saucers were now a popular household 
phrase and flying saucer watching had become a popular pastime. 

The year 1957 was another big year and again the communications media had a tremendous 
amount of influence on the number of sightings and creating interest in our heavenly bodies. 1957 was 
the year of Sputnik and it was also the year when 341 astronomical sightings were reported to the Air 
Force. No other year came close to equaling the record number of astronomical sightings of 1957. 

The years 1964 through 1967 were record years for the project and also for the 
communications media. We start out with the Socorro, New Mexico sighting in April, 1964, and it 
levels off when Dr. Edward U. Condon finishes his Scientific Study of Unidentified Flying Objects. In 
between those two events, the copy on UFO's from the communications media was out of sight. We 
don't hear too much about UFO's any more, however, there are a few groups who would continue to 
keep the subject alive and most of these do it strictly for personal gain. 

Along these lines, I've often been asked by individuals what I think and I reply thusly. It 
would be egotistical of man to think that the creator built the magnificent Universe with all its majestic 
beauty just for an insignificant planet. No, I believe that there is life on other planets, but the vast 
distances which separate us also prohibit us from communicating with each other. Intelligent life in 
other planets of the Universe is a possibility, however, the hypothesis that we have been visited by 
flying saucers from another planet is not supported by fact. I have personally reviewed over 10,000 
UFO reports which were submitted to the Air Force and I can honestly say that not one of them has led 
me to believe that we have been visited by an extraterrestrial vehicle. 

I realize that the proponents of extraterrestrial visitation will cry out in dismay over my 
uneducated statement, but the truth of the matter is that we Americans have a history of being 
romantics and often imagine the impossible dreams. If you believe in extraterrestrial visitation, then 
for everyone's sake, present your evidence, state your facts, and let the true scientists of our nation be 
the judges. Let's quit exploiting the masses; because if you are the founder of an extraterrestrial 
vehicle, it will be self-evident and fame and fortune await you beyond your wildest dreams. 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



LETTERS 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



111 



As Chief of Project Blue Book, I received many letters from people of all age groups. Some of 
them were nice and some of them were not. I took my lumps and then I also received my bouquets. 
The vast majority of personal letters which I received were in the nice category and I would like to 
share a few of them with you. 

The following letter/poem is my favorite one because it demonstrates a number of qualities 
about the person who wrote it. Donita Gareri was a very young teen when I gave her that interview in 
my office on a Saturday morning. 

"Dear Major Quintanilla, 

I wish to thank you for giving me your time to talk about UFO's. It was a very 
interesting meeting and I enjoyed it very much. I also enjoyed looking at the files, reports, and 
maps. Also, I wish to thank you for the books and pamphlets concerning UFO's. Despite all 
your information, I guess I would still like to believe in "flying saucers". I guess you'll have to 
"work on me" some more. Oh yes, I have composed a small thank-you poem for your talk on 
UFO's. 

Surrounded by those globes and maps, 
hanging on the walls, 
Looking at the planets there 
Either huge or small, 

I felt my senses wander through 
the endless times of space, 
And wonder if a saucer there, 
Did through the blue sky race. 

Are they real? I asked myself. 
Is it really true? 

Do they have some flashing lights 
Read and orange and blue? 

Are they manned by little men 
Smarter than we are? 
Do they come form a planet, 
Or an unknown star? 

Your talk was very interesting, 
And so I do thank you. 
But as for flying saucers, well 
I leave that up to you. 

THE END 
Yours Truly 



112 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Major Hector Quintanilla, Jr. 
Chief, Project Blue Book 
Wright-Patterson AFB 
Dayton, Ohio 

Dear Hector: 

I hope you enjoy my little poem; (and I did) 

There was a young lad named Hector, 
Who was asked to be an inspector. 
He tried in vain, but he couldn't explain 
The objects that visited Exeter. 

A.C. 

(Nobody, but nobody called me Hector around the outfit. They called me "Quint" or "Q".) 



Major Quintanilla: 

I don't have much to report this time. It's sort of disappointing to observe only some 
routine flying by the space ships, after seeing the big show up on the Moon on November 6 th . 

I can't forget the show that they put on October27th. They really went all out to put 
on a good show, using that big full moon as a mammoth, lighted stage and the reflected 
sunlight from the Earth as huge flood lights, shining down on the stage. 

The space ship pilots showed terrific bursts of speed in their big, sweeping, semi- 
circular arcs up from the moon, or down toward the moon's surface. 

I will never forget how they let the big star attraction have the stage completely to 
itself. As they moved it slowly and like a Queen, right across the very center of that stage. 

Although through my binoculars, that big long space ship resembled only a tiny- 
pointed pencil with tiny, triangular tail fins, it still was able to give you the impression that it 
was a big, long, heavy, ship by the way that it moved. 

These explorers of our planet based on the Moon sure know how to put on a good 
show, with what little equipment that they have. 

Sincerely yours, 
Marty 

(Marty was one of my regular pen pals and I had many of those. He called me, he visited me, and he 
wrote me letters. He tried to be helpful, but he did take up a lot of my time. How do you tell an 
individual to flake-off when you know very well that by doing so you will hurt him deeply. I didn't 
and when I destroyed his file it was two inches thick.) 



UFOs: An Air Force Dilemma 



113 



Major Hector Quintanilla, Jr. 
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio 

Major Quintanilla, 

I am a firm believer in Unidentified Flying Objects. Let us say that these objects do 
exist-but from where do they come? The most popular theory concerning their origin is that 
they are extraterrestrial. However, we are aware of the limitations of interstellar travel. I have 
another theory of their origin: they are from the fourth dimension, time. Could Unidentified 
Flying Objects be our future space vehicles? Could these vehicles be piloted by future 
generations? Could a gap connecting the present with the past and/or future exist? Why not? 

Upon hearing of this theory, one would ask "why don't they communicate with us"? 
It is meant that man be allowed to know his destination? I would say no. You can imagine the 
fear this knowledge would bring. It could be said that these people are intelligent enough to 
know better than to reveal the future to us. Yet another question arises: How did these vehicles 
get here? If you consider the speed of an object like this and the distance it could cover in a 
short period of time, it would be more apt to fall into this invisible, measurable gap in time 
than our aircraft. This theory of the UFO and time is the result of my hearing of the 
disappearance of five TBM Avengers and one PBM Martin Mariner on December 5, 1945. 

I realize that you are busy, but if possible I would appreciate hearing your opinion of 
this theory and receiving any information you might have on the TBM Avengers and the PBM 
Martin Mariner. 

Sincerely, 
D.M. 

(The Avengers disappeared over the so-called Bermuda triangle and the Navy made a thorough 
investigation of this tragedy. The Navy findings were inconclusive, however, UFO buffs like to 
present this incident as a classic, supporting their extraterrestrial hypothesis. Since the writer asked my 
opinion I gave it to him and I told him that I believed that the Avengers and the Martin Mariner were 
destroyed when they hit a patch of Char Air Turbulence (CAT). Very little is know of CAT (an 
atmospheric phenomena which behaves like a vacuum or like a suction at times) and numerous aircraft 
have been involved with this phenomena. The phenomena is destructive in nature and our modern 
radar equipment is incapable of detecting the patches before flying into their midst. More research 
needs to be done in this area and the government is aware of this and is expanding some resources 
towards a solution of this problem.) 



114 



Lt. Col Hector Quintanilla 



Major Hector Quintanilla Jr. 
Project Blue Book 
Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio 

Dear Major Quintanilla, 

I would like to offer a plausible explanation (1) for the appearance of the UFO's, (2) 
why, if they are not a vehicle of ours or another nation, they do not contact us, and (3) where 
possibly they may be from. 

First, observation over the years shows us the majority of the UFO's when sighted on 
the ground are usually in the vicinity of, or over water, also related are high tension wires. A 
tube projects underneath. 

When they do seem to follow us, as they have our cars and trucks, they are using 
diversionary tactics, making believe they are observing us when their primary interest is for 
refueling and stealing our water. 

Our U.S. Army is perfecting an NH9 engine (ammonia). Water can be decomposed 
by electricity to H+ and 0-, high energy fuels. M.I.T. has also been working on a type of 
gravity machine. So may life on another planet such as Jupiter. Science says that life could 
exist there. 

We see now conditions that seem to answer our questions. Why they appear usually at 
night and run away from us — they are not really interested in us but our water. Jupiter has 
ample hydrogen and some water but too large a land mass. When they return they have the 
oxygen remaining after using the hydrogen or ammonia in swamp water, their planet has 
methane and ammonia to react with oxygen. 

If we may believe some accounts that these people are about 4-5 feet high, 80-190 
pounds, and a greenish coloring exactly fitting the conditions as Jupiter's density, gravity, and 
atmosphere by them. I believe they need a varified oxygen atmosphere, however, they need 
water. 

Also, why do our polar glaciers seem to be receding without increasing our water 

supply? 

Sincerely, 
D.M. 



(I used to get all types of theories about the origin of the UFO's, their alleged occupants, design of the 
vehicles, etc. A couple of these designs were so clever and well made, that I had our engineers check 
them out for feasibility. None of them ever amounted to anything, but we did consider them.)